Wednesday
Lost in the shadows
Rain begins parade around Peninsula B10
Call distracts from Seahawks’ performance B1
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS October 7, 2015 | 75¢
Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper
Port may sponsor Quilcene feasibility
Daylight robbery strikes PA bank
Study could solidify wastewater facility BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
QUILCENE — Port of Port Townsend administrators have decided that the port can legally sponsor a feasibility study of a community wastewater treatment facility in Quilcene. The matter is expected to go before port commissioners at 1 p.m. next Wednesday, Oct. 14, at 333 Benedict St. The feasibility study would solidify the project’s cost and process while polling the estimated 101 property owners in the Quilcene rural village area to determine if they would support and pay for such a system. “We need to do this study and get the preliminary design in place so we can determine what kind of system we need and how much it costs,” said Linda Herzog of Quilcene, who has approached several county agencies with a request for sponsorship and support of the study.
Money set aside Jefferson County commissioners authorized $100,000 for the study from the Public Infrastructure Fund in March 2012. Since then, the money has remained in the county coffers awaiting a formal request from an authorized government agency to commission the study, according to county Administrator Philip Morley. Last month, none of the three qualified public agencies — the county, the port and the Jefferson County Public Utility District — was willing or was allowed to sponsor the study.
State code Since then, the port has studied state code and determined it could sponsor the study, according to Deputy Port Director Jim Pivarnik on Tuesday. The port’s sponsorship depends on commissioner approval. The agreement would commit the port to managing the feasibility study but not to build or administer the system, Pivarnik said. TURN
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Port Angeles police investigators, from left, Detective Cpl. David Arand, Detective Sgt. Tyler Peninger and Detective Shane Martin gather outside the First Street branch of Umpqua Bank in Port Angeles after the bank was robbed Tuesday. BELOW: Video surveillance footage of the suspect.
Police search for a male suspect who could be in his 60s BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — City police Tuesday were searching for an armed man, possibly in his 60s, who robbed the Umpqua Bank branch at 1033 E. First St. The man brandished a handgun and demanded money from bank staff with customers present at about 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Deputy Police Chief Brian Smith said TURN
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Candidate to resume active campaigning physical rehabilitation wing for a Medical Center in Bremerton. Trooper Russ Winger, State broken left arm and several broken ribs and is listed in satisfac- Patrol spokesman, said Tuesday the investigation continues, with “During the past few weeks, tory condition. no projected date for its complethe role of hospital commissioner State Patrol investigation tion. has never been more clear to me,” “The detective assigned to this the Nordland resident said in the The State Patrol is investigat- case has not had an opportunity statement. ing why Russell’s 2004 Honda “We must continue to make Pilot crossed the centerline of the to interview Mr. Russell due to his sure our community’s outstanding highway and crashed into a Dodge injuries and recovery,” Winger wrote in an email. facilities, expanding services and Ram pickup truck. “I do not have a time line when compassionate, skilled providers The collision killed Robert this will actually occur.” are here to serve local residents.” Dawson, 88, a passenger in the Russell, 73, was airlifted to pickup, and injured two others. Election challenger Harborview Medical Center in Brett F. Dawson, 54, of SilverSeattle after the Sept. 23 wreck on dale, another passenger in the Former Port Townsend Mayor state Highway 104 and remained pickup, has been discharged from Kees Kolff is challenging Russell there until last Thursday, when he Harborview. for his hospital commission seat was transferred to Jefferson Pamela J. Thresher, 53, of Suqua- in the Nov. 3 general election. Healthcare in Port Townsend. mish — the driver of the pickup — Kolff suspended his campaign He is being treated in the has been discharged from Harrison Sept. 24 after hearing of the acci-
Russell recovering after car wreck BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — Jefferson Healthcare Commissioner Charles E. “Chuck” Russell, who is recovering from a car wreck in which a Bainbridge Island man was killed, has announced he intends to resume actively campaigning for re-election. He gave no timeline for doing so. Russell, 73, reaffirmed his commitment to the Jefferson Healthcare hospital system and to his campaign for a fourth six-year term in a Monday news release.
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dent but resumed it Sept. 27 after talking to Russell. On Tuesday, Kolff said the issues would be the same as previously debated Russell in the campaign and that the wreck should not affect the voting. “The issues will still be access to affordable health care, the economics of community health and retaining providers in a way that will allow us to recruit ne providers,” he said.
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Tundra
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Copyright © 2015, Michael Mepham Editorial Services
www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web. *Source: Quantcast Inc.
PORT ANGELES main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 General information: 360-452-2345 Toll-free from Jefferson County and West End: 800-826-7714 Fax: 360-417-3521 Lobby hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday ■ See Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and email addresses of key executives and contact people. SEQUIM news office: 360-681-2390 147-B W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 JEFFERSON COUNTY news office: 360-385-2335 1939 E. Sims Way Port Townsend, WA 98368
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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS!! CONTACTS To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2015, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER
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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Twilight’s 10th edition swaps gender CALL THEM EDYTHE and Beau. For the 10th anniversary of her Twilight series, Stephenie Meyer is offering a gender swap for those THE POST-JOURNAL VIA AP millions caught up in the saga of Bella and Edward. Little, Brown Books for HAUNTING FACE Young Readers on Tuesday Event planner Scott Mekus says an actor released a Twilight/Life portraying the Scary Lucy statue, which and Death dual edition of Meyer’s first of four main drew worldwide scorn earlier this year for novels in the best-selling its unflattering depiction of the “I Love vampire series. Lucy” star Lucille Ball, will be part of the The original book, set in Lakewood, N.Y., Chautauqua Mall’s Forks, has been paired “Haunting at the Mall“ during weekends with “Life and Death,” a through Halloween. narrative that reverses the author’s famed romance between a teen girl and As of late Tuesday According to Little, male vampire, instead havmorning, the book was in Brown, the alternate vering a human boy (Beau) the top 500 on Amazon. sion contains nearly 400 fall for a female vampire (Edythe). pages of new material. com’s best-seller list.
A
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL MONDAY’S QUESTION: Do you think it’s important to reduce your carbon footprint?
Passings By The Associated Press
GRACE LEE BOGGS, 100, a longtime activist who was part of the labor, civil rights, black power, women’s rights and environmental justice movements, died Monday at her Detroit home. Mrs. Boggs and late husband James Boggs were involved in advocacy for decades. She Mrs. Boggs helped orga- in 2014 nize a 1963 march in Detroit by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and the November 1963 Grassroots Leadership Conference in Detroit with Malcom X. Her death was announced by the James and Grace Lee Boggs Center to Nurture Community Leadership, which she set up after her husband’s 1993 death. She moved to Detroit in the 1950s to write for a socialist newspaper. That’s where she met James Boggs, an AfricanAmerican man who would become her husband and collaborator. In the 1960s, the couple became involved in the black power movement and were known to offer Malcolm X a place to stay when he visited Detroit. Their later work focused on Detroit’s residents and neighborhoods and included starting Detroit Summer, a program for young people to work on community projects. Mrs. Boggs was the subject of a 2013 documentary, “American Revolutionary: The Evolution of Grace Lee Boggs,” that aired on PBS.
J. WHYATT “JERRY” MONDESIRE, 65, a former Philadelphia NAACP president and longtime civil rights activist, editor and publisher, has died. Mr. Mondesire’s family said in a statement he died Sunday at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. Philly.com reported that Mr. Mondesire was having dialysis at a local hospital Friday when he suffered a brain aneurysm and was transferred to Jefferson and placed on a ventilator. Mr. Mondesire, longtime president of Philadelphia’s NAACP chapter until last year and publisher of the Philadelphia Sunday Sun, was a former reporter and editor at The Philadelphia Inquirer. A founding member of the Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists, he also was a community affairs host on WDAS-FM. In 2014, the national NAACP ousted Mr. Mondesire and three local board members who had questioned his financial management of the Philadelphia chapter. Attorney General Kathleen Kane was charged
with perjury, obstruction and other counts after prosecutors alleged that she illegally leaked information about a 2009 investigation into Mr. Mondesire’s handling of state job training grants. Mr. Mondesire was never charged with any crime.
Yes
59.4%
No Undecided
37.4% 3.2%
Total votes cast: 759 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Peninsula Lookback
Setting it Straight
From PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
Corrections and clarifications
Local residents will not know the ship when she With fine weather preties up sometime between 8 vailing over the Olympic Peninsula, the largest num- and 9 p.m. at the Angeles Sand and Gravel dock. She ber of hunters in years invaded nearby forests Sun- has been in Todd Shipyards, Seattle, during her absence. day, the initial day of the While at Todd, a new deer and bear season, and structure was added amidalthough hunting is ships, filling in the gap reported not good, at least between the forward and 10 large deer are known to after superstructures. have been bagged. Most of them were three-point or 1990 (25 years ago) better. State Game Protector Seven entries are ready Fred Rice said today that to take on land, sea and bog he cannot remember ever as the Great Port Townsend having seen so many deer Bay Kinetic Sculpture Race hunters out around here. gets set to take off at noon He counted 40 cars parked today. at Slab Camp, behind Lineup is at 11 a.m. at Sequim, and said Cox’s Val- Water and Madison streets. ley is crowded, as are other The entries tested their favorite areas. contraptions to the delight Among those to bag deer of many Saturday. early were Sam Kallas and Seen Around The race starts downtwo men from the USS Peninsula snapshots town, dives into the bay, Ramsay who bagged a winds around the hills of 3-point, 175-pound buck at PORT ANGELES Port Townsend, chugs about eight o’clock yesterBARISTA’S dog, looking through the “Dismal Bog” like a coffee patron herself, day morning in the vicinity south of Boat Haven and of Coleman’s ranch. waiting patiently in the finishes with a long run up Another lucky hunter driver’s seat of a parked Sims Way and Water Street. was Fred Binkle, who shot car for her mistress to fina large buck in the upper ish making a customer’s Sol Duc burn early yesterorder . . . Lottery day. WANTED! “Seen Around” LAST NIGHT’S LOTitems recalling things seen on the 1965 (50 years ago) TERY results are available North Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box on a timely basis by phonAfter a five-month 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax absence, the U.S. Coast ing, toll-free, 800-545-7510 360-417-3521; or email news@ or on the Internet at www. Guard cutter Winona will peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure walottery.com/Winning return to her home port you mention where you saw your here [Port Angeles] tonight. Numbers. “Seen Around.”
1940 (75 years ago)
■ A public viewing of Clallam County equipment to be sold in an online surplus sale will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13. The sale ends at 4:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 16. An item on Page A5 Tuesday erroneously said the public viewing was this past Tuesday and that the sale ends this Friday.
_________ The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, contact Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-417-3530 or lleach@peninsuladailynews.com.
Laugh Lines DONALD TRUMP IS leading among Christian evangelical voters. They love him. Apparently, they like him because a Trump presidency would mean the world really is coming to an end. Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, is struggling in the polls. According to political analysts, Hillary Clinton is now trying to make herself seem more relatable to the average person. Today, she spent the day criticizing Hillary Clinton. Conan O’Brien
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS WEDNESDAY, Oct. 7, the 280th day of 2015. There are 85 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Oct. 7, 1985, Palestinian gunmen hijacked the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro in the Mediterranean. The hijackers killed Leon Klinghoffer, a Jewish-American tourist, before surrendering Oct. 9. On this date: ■ In 1765, the Stamp Act Congress convened in New York to draw up colonial grievances against England. ■ In 1858, the fifth debate between Illinois senatorial candidates Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas took place
in Galesburg. ■ In 1929, former Interior Secretary Albert B. Fall, one of the main figures of the Teapot Dome scandal, went on trial, charged with accepting a bribe from oil tycoon Edward L. Doheny. Fall was found guilty and sentenced to a year in prison; he served nine months. Doheny was acquitted at his own trial of offering the bribe Fall was convicted of taking. ■ In 1954, Marian Anderson became the first black singer hired by the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York. ■ In 1960, Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy and Republican opponent Richard Nixon held their second televised
debate, this one in Washington, D.C. ■ In 1991, University of Oklahoma law professor Anita Hill publicly accused Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas of making sexually inappropriate comments when she worked for him; Thomas denied Hill’s allegations. ■ In 2004, President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney conceded that Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction as they tried to shift the Iraq War debate to a new issue, arguing that Saddam was abusing a U.N. oil-for-food program. ■ Ten years ago: The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the
International Atomic Energy Agency and its chief, Mohamed ElBaradei. ■ Five years ago: New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie canceled construction of a decades-in-the-making train tunnel between New Jersey and Manhattan, citing cost overruns that had ballooned the price tag from $5 billion to $10 billion or more. ■ One year ago: Two Japanese scientists, Isamu Akasaki and Hiroshi Amano, and a naturalized American, Shuji Nakamura, won the Nobel Prize for physics for inventing a new kind of light-emitting diode (LED) that promised to revolutionize the way the world lighted its offices and homes.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Wednesday, October 7, 2015 PAGE
A5 Briefly: Nation Former U.N. president faces bribery charges NEW YORK — A former president of the United Nations General Assembly turned the world body into a “platform for profit” by accepting over $1 million in bribes and a trip to New Orleans from a billionaire Chinese real estate mogul and other businesspeople to pave the way for lucrative investments, a prosecutor charged Tuesday. John Ashe, a former U.N. ambassador from Antigua and Barbuda, faces conspiracy and bribery-related charges along with five others, including Ashe Francis Lorenzo, a deputy U.N. ambassador from the Dominican Republic. U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara repeatedly noted that it was early in the investigation and told reporters that as it proceeds: “We will be asking: Is bribery business as usual at the U.N.?”
Warm winter expected PORTLAND, Maine — Heating bills should drop this winter for most U.S. households, thanks to a combination of lower energy prices and warmer weather across most of the country, the
U.S. Energy Department said Tuesday. The Energy Department’s annual prediction calls for lower heating bills across the board but with the biggest savings for those who use propane or oil to heat their homes. The government predicts a 25 percent drop ($459 on average) for homes using heating oil and an 18 percent drop (about $322 on average) for homes using propane, compared to last winter. The outlook is based on a forecast from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration for warmer weather across all regions except for the West, which is projected to be slightly cooler. The survey did not track firewood, which is usually used as a supplemental heat source.
Conviction thrown out NEW YORK — A judge threw out the conviction of a man who has spent a quarter-century behind bars in a notorious New York City tourist killing. A Manhattan judge overturned Johnny Hincapie’s conviction Tuesday after a monthslong hearing on the 1990 death of Brian Watkins of Provo, Utah. Watkins was killed defending his parents from a subway-platform mugging while the family was visiting for the U.S. Open tennis tournament. An exonerated co-defendant and a witness who came forward said Hincapie played no part in the attack. The Associated Press
General recommends U.S. revise troop plan Commander tells Congress cutbacks limit Afghan training BY DEB RIECHMANN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan recommended on Tuesday that President Barack Obama revise his plan and keep more than 1,000 U.S. troops in the country beyond 2016, just days after a deadly U.S. airstrike “mistakenly struck” a hospital during fierce fighting in the north. Gen. John F. Campbell told Congress that conditions on the ground have changed since Obama announced his plan in 2014 to cut the current U.S. force of 9,800 to an embassy-based security contingent of about 1,000 in Kabul post-2016. Obama has vowed to a warweary nation to end the U.S. war in Afghanistan and get American troops out by the time he leaves
office in January 2017. Campbell said, however, that Afghanistan remains engaged in a violent battle against the Taliban, military operations in Pakistan have pushed fighters, including those linked to al-Qaida, into eastern and northern Afghanistan and the emergence of Islamic State group fighters has further complicated the conflict.
Limits ability Campbell, the top commander of U.S. and allied forces in Afghanistan, said that dropping to 1,000 troops would leave the United States with limited ability to train and assist the Afghan forces and even less capacity to conduct counterterrorism operations. He said the different options he has provided to his superiors are for troop levels beyond a nor-
mal embassy presence of about 1,000. Campbell refused to discuss the numbers of troops he is recommending.
‘Will stomp my foot’ But when Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, asked Campbell if he thought the president should revise his troop withdrawal plan, Campbell replied: “I will stomp my foot. Yes, sir.” Both Defense Secretary Ash Carter and Secretary of State John Kerry have stressed the importance of continuing missions in Afghanistan. Campbell offered details about the airstrike on a medical clinic that Doctors Without Borders ran in Kunduz. He said a U.S. Special Operations unit that was close by was “talking to the aircraft that delivered” the firepower, which killed at least 22 people. The airstrike occurred as Afghan forces were retaking Kunduz from the Taliban.
Briefly: World Russian claims about Turkey flights rejected BRUSSELS — NATO’s secretary-general on Tuesday rejected Moscow’s claim that its military incursion into alliance airspace over Turkey wasn’t intentional or important, saying there were two separate incidents and “the violation lasted for a long time.” NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg told a news conference that recent breaches of Turkish airspace by Russian warplanes Stoltenberg were “very serious” — or dangerous. “It doesn’t look like an accident, and we’ve seen two of them over the weekend,” he added. In a statement, NATO spokeswoman Carmen Romero said Stoltenberg later confirmed that NATO generals would be contacting their Russian counterparts about the violation of Turkish airspace. “It’s unacceptable to violate the airspace of another country,” Stoltenberg told reporters.
Elephants poisoned HARARE, Zimbabwe — Fourteen elephants were poisoned by cyanide in Zimbabwe
in three separate incidents, two years after poachers killed more than 200 elephants by poisoning, Zimbabwe’s National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority said Tuesday. Three elephants were killed in Matusadona National Park in northern Zimbabwe and 11 more were found dead in Hwange National Park. In all cases the elephants were killed by cyanide, according to kidney and liver samples from the dead elephants tested by the Biological Sciences Department, said parks spokeswoman Caroline Washaya Moyo. The ivory tusks had been cut off six elephants at one location in Hwange park but the other five elephants still had their tusks, suggesting the poachers were disrupted.
Mudslide investigation SANTA CATARINA PINULA, Guatemala — Prosecutors said Tuesday they have opened an investigation into who allowed homes to be built where a massive mudslide killed at least 161 people. Rotman Perez, secretary of criminal policy at the Public Ministry, said officials will seek to find out which officials gave authorization for the construction and determine their degree of responsibility. Disaster Reduction Commission Director Alejandro Maldonado said he had warned the mayor of Santa Catarina Pinula that a river was eating away at the base of the steep hill. The Associated Press
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HELPING
FLOODED NEIGHBORS
Chris Rosselot, left, and Branch Tanksley, right, both with the Charleston City Boat Yard, help Kerry Gonzalez evacuate from her home near Summerville, S.C., on Tuesday. Residents are concerned that the Ashley river will continue to rise as floodwaters come down from Columbia.
Justice Dept. preps to free 6,000 federal drug convicts BY MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT THE NEW YORK TIMES
WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is preparing to release roughly 6,000 inmates from federal prison as part of an effort to ease overcrowding and roll back the harsh penalties given to nonviolent drug dealers in the 1980s and ’90s, according to federal law enforcement officials. The release is scheduled to occur from Oct. 30 to Nov. 2, and will be one of the largest one-time discharges of inmates from federal prisons in American history, said the officials. The Bureau of Prisons is
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arranging for many of the inmates to initially move into halfway houses, one official said. In April, the United States Sentencing Commission created guidelines that reduced the penalties for many nonviolent drug crimes and made some of those changes retroactive. Officials said at the time that the move applied to at least 50,000 federal inmates sentenced under the previous guidelines. The United States has a quarter of the world’s prison population and both Republicans and Democrats agree that prison spending, which accounts for a third of the Justice Department’s
budget, needs to be reduced. On Capitol Hill, lawmakers are considering other ways to scale back the numbers of people who are facing stays in federal prison for nonviolent drug crimes. A bipartisan group of powerful senators last week proposed a broad overhaul of the existing system for imposing mandatory minimum sentences, urged on by President Barack Obama and a coalition of activist groups that ranged from the far right to the far left. The changes would be retroactive if the legislation is enacted, and lawmakers estimated that up to 6,500 prisoners could qualify.
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West: Hot air balloons strike truck, power lines
Nation: Pumpkin experts expect fall crop shortage
Nation: Officials propose $1.9 million fine for flights
World: Nobel Prize goes to two neutrino physicists
TWO HOT AIR balloons in the annual Albuquerque, N.M., International Balloon Fiesta were involved Tuesday in separate accidents, with one landing on a truck and the other striking a power line. There were no injuries reported from the incidents that happened about a mile apart, police Officer Simon Drobik said. One balloon landed on a parked truck near an intersection about 7 miles south of Balloon Fiesta Park. The envelope of another balloon became tangled in power lines as it landed, temporarily knocking out electricity to some 2,600 customers.
THERE SHOULD BE enough pumpkins for Halloween this year, but that might not be the case for the canned pumpkin used in pies come Thanksgiving, according to crop experts in Illinois, the country’s top pumpkin-producing state. “I would not wait until Nov. 20,” University of Illinois professor Mohammad Babadoost said, referencing the Nov. 26 holiday. “I’d buy it whenever it comes to the store.” Large canned-pumpkin manufacturer Libby said yields could be off by as much as a third this year in Illinois, where about 90 percent of the pumpkins grown in the U.S. come from.
THE FEDERAL AVIATION Administration on Tuesday proposed a record $1.9 million fine against an aerial photography company for flying drones in crowded New York and Chicago airspace without permission. SkyPan International Inc. of Chicago operated 65 unauthorized flights between March 2012 and December 2014 in congested airspace, the FAA said in a statement. Forty-three flights were in the heavily restricted New York airspace without air traffic control clearance, the agency said. The drones also lacked the two-way equipment required of manned aircraft.
TAKAAKI KAJITA OF Japan and Arthur McDonald of Canada won the Nobel Prize in physics on Tuesday for discovering that tiny particles called neutrinos change identities as they whiz through the universe. By uncovering the “chameleon-like” nature of neutrinos, the laureates had solved a long-standing puzzle in particle physics that could alter our grasp of the cosmos, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said. “The discovery has changed our understanding of the innermost workings of matter and can prove crucial to our view of the universe,” the academy said.
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Study: System CONTINUED FROM A1 meeting last Thursday, where Morley “was giving As currently envisioned, us all kinds of reasons why the system would provide he is against the project,” each user with a septic tank according to Herzog. that would connect to a cenMorley said Herzog is tral tank for waste disposal, mistaken. instead of requiring indi“I am not opposed to the vidual drain fields, Pivarnik project,” he said. said. “That the port is rein“With each system stating their sponsorship is requiring a drain field and great news.” backup drain field, there In 2002, the port indiwill be no room on many cated it would sponsor the properties to build,” he said. study but then withdrew, The cost of the system according to Morley. cannot be determined until At Thursday’s meeting, the study is complete, but Morley said he suggested both Pivarnik and Morley that the county’s past expeestimated it would cost sev- rience with the sewer syseral million dollars. tem in Beckett Point and a Once the study is com- proposed Port Hadlock sysplete, the PUD could secure tem should be considered as financing and build and a resource, and that the maintain the system, feasibility study could be according to Jim Parker, the accomplished for less than utility’s manager. the $100,000 allocation and “We have experience in building large on-site septic without the involvement of systems, so managing this an engineer. “We are supportive and project is something we would love to see this hapcould do,” he said. “People can also petition pen,” Morley said of the us to create their own local project. ________ utility district.” Port Executive Director Jefferson County Editor Charlie Larry Crockett, Herzog, Bermant can be reached at 360Morley and Parker were 385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula among the attendees at a dailynews.com.
Election: Forum CONTINUED FROM A1 care system,” Russell wrote. “I do not feel the acciIn addition to the dent will affect how people contest between Russell vote; I think they will and Kolff, there is another support who they feel is contested election on the the most qualified and the hospital board between best equipped to serve the incumbent Mari Dressler hospital community,” Kolff and challenger Paul Stafsaid. ford. In his statement, Russell A candidate forum sponthanked first responders sored by Port Townsend and all those involved in his Rotary is scheduled for treatment. “The care I am receiving noon Oct. 20 at Fort Worden is excellent, and I am grate- Commons. Russell has not said if he ful for and proud of the quality of our local health- will attend.
Seattle woman charged in beau’s toddler’s death THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE — King County prosecutors have charged a 20-year-old Seattle woman accused of kicking her boyfriend’s 17-month son to death. The Seattle Times reported that Alicia Goemaat was charged Tuesday with second-degree murder. Drue Lehto was found dead in the couple’s West Seattle home Sept. 27. Detectives began an investigation after seeing blood
and bruises on the child. Police say Goemaat initially denied any wrongdoing but later told them she became angry with the toddler and kicked him twice in the stomach. She told police she then put him in a playpen and a short time later discovered he wasn’t breathing. Prosecutors allege the assault occurred after the victim and Goemaat’s 2-year-old son fought over a toy.
KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Fairview Elementary School, shuttered since 2007, is now under consideration for reopening to accommodate an influx of new students to the Port Angeles School District.
PA School Board delays decision on bond measure BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles School Board has delayed a decision on when to propose another school construction bond to voters until after newly elected board members are seated in 2016. Options the board may consider next year could include reopening Fairview Elementary School, building a wing on Stevens Middle School and moving all sixth-grade students there or building a new elementary school, board member Lonnie Linn told those attending the Port Angeles Business Association meeting Tuesday morning. The board had discussed placing a bond to pay for a new high school on the February ballot. That won’t happen, said Linn, who attended the meeting as a candidate running for re-election in the Nov. 3 general election. Because there will be two or three new School Board members as of Jan. 1 and their positions on bond measures are unknown, the current board has declined to put a new bond on the February 2016 special election ballot, Linn said. “The decision will not be made until the new board is seated,” he said. He added that a decision on how to address the district’s needs could be a year or more in the future.
More factors That’s because the board has more factors to take into account. After several years of declining enrollment, elementary schools are seeing an increase in students. At the same time, state laws are restricting class sizes. The two factors create a need for
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more classrooms, Linn said. Linn, 60, a construction estimator and salesperson, attended Tuesday’s meeting to take part in a voter forum with challenger Rick Marti, 70, a building supply trade retiree. Marti was unable to attend Tuesday’s forum due to another obligation, so Linn answered questions about the current status of the School Board’s bond plans and finances. He told of new complications affecting district options.
Initiative 1351 In 2014, state voters approved Initiative 1351, mandating the reduction of class sizes at all levels, from kindergarten through high school. Under the voter-approved law, kindergarten through third-grade classrooms are required to have no more than 17 students. Port Angeles schools’ 2015 class sizes range from 15 to 27 students in those grades. In fourth through 12th grades, each classroom is required to have no more than 25 students. Reduced class sizes are already being phased in, beginning with kindergarten through third grades. Fourth- through sixth-grade class size reductions are expected to be added sometime in the next few years, Linn said. The new requirement could require as many as 16 additional classrooms in the district that already has no space for more students. “The elementary schools are busting at the seams,” Linn said. In October 2001, the district had 1,987 students in kindergarten through the fifth grade in seven ele-
mentary schools. By 2003, that had fallen to 1,856 students. In June 2004, the district closed Monroe Elementary School at 106 Monroe Road. In October 2006, enrollment fell to 1,839. Fairview Elementary School at 166 Lake Farm Road was closed in June 2007. Roosevelt Middle School was converted to an elementary school, and sixth-grade classes were moved to the elementary schools in September 2007. With the addition of the sixth grade in October 2007, elementary enrollment was 2,117 students. By 2011, elementary enrollment had fallen by another 257 students to 1,860. A state Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction enrollment projection indicated that by 2018, enrollment would fall to 1,682 students. Instead, elementary enrollment began steadily growing again, with 1,882 students in October 2012; 1,907 students in 2013; 1,923 students in 2013; and 1,923 students in 2014. This year, the district had 1,968 enrolled students in kindergarten through sixth grade.
Increasing costs The estimated cost of building a new high school has increased from $98 million to $113 million because of higher construction cost estimates and interest rates, Linn said. Voter rejection of a $98 million bond in February indicates voters are not ready for such a large reconstruction project, he said. Fairview was built in 1973, with additions and upgrades in 1978, and has received only basic maintenance since it was closed in 2007.
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Lawsuit: People who can’t pay court fines are jailed BY NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS AND GENE JOHNSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SPOKANE — The American Civil Liberties Union sued a county in Washington state Tuesday, accusing it of sending people to jail or forcing them to toil on work crews if they fail to pay their court fines — a practice that makes the poor poorer and amounts to a “modern-day debtors’ prison,” the organization said. The group’s state chapter has long alleged that Benton County District Court penalizes defendants without investigating whether they can afford to pay their fines.
Practice detailed
Class action lawsuit The lawsuit, which was filed as class action in Yakima County Superior Court, is part of a long national campaign by the American Civil Liberties Union to combat the effect of court fines on poor defendants. In 2010, the organization published a report that examined the way courts impose fines in Michigan, Ohio, Georgia, Louisiana and Washington state, noting that the fines can often compound with interest or late fees, contributing to the
ANDY MILLER Benton County prosecutor impoverishment of some defendants. The failure to pay often results in further arrests and further fines, and the results have disproportionately incarcerated minority defendants, opponents say. While courts can jail people for willfully refusing to pay, they are required to ensure that people are able to pay. Earlier this year, DeKalb County, Ga., agreed to reform its system after a federal lawsuit brought by the ACLU. The town of Clanton, Ala., also cut its ties with a private, for-profit probation company that threatened to jail people for nonpayment of fines following a lawsuit by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Alarming trend Nusrat Choudhury, a staff attorney with the national ACLU’s Racial Justice Project, noted that the practice has become an especially alarming trend since the recession, when fines hit people especially hard and when some jurisdictions might have started becoming more aggressive in collecting them. The systems “operate somewhat differently in different places, but the bottom line is the same: There are people being jailed because they are poor,” she said. In south-central Washington’s Benton County, defendants often represented by public defenders have little opportunity to explain why they are unable to pay, the ACLU’s lawsuit said. That’s in part because public defenders are poorly funded and trained, depriving defendants of their right to meaningful assistance of counsel, the lawsuit said. The ACLU said the court system violated the U.S. and state constitutions, which prohibit incarcerating someone for not paying court-imposed fines, fees and costs without a meaningful hearing and consid-
eration of alternatives to jail. Defendants were credited $80 toward their fines for each day they served on a work crew, and $50 for each day in jail. Typically more than onequarter of defendants in the county jail are “sitting out” their fines on any given day, according to a review of jail rosters.
Commissioners oppose All three Benton County commissioners oppose the practice. “We told them a year and a half ago they were going to get sued,” Commissioner James Beaver said of the judges. “They politely told me I don’t have statutory authority to tell them what to do.” Beaver, a former mayor of Kennewick, said that when judges order someone to jail over fines, the facility bills whichever city arrested the defendant. That means the cost of jailing them is borne by the cities rather than the county, he said. When asked why the judges keep sending people
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Bank: Robber CONTINUED FROM A1 sula Narcotics Enforcement Team detectives satuCustomers were present rated the area. Olympic Medical Center as several drawers were robbed of an undetermined on Caroline Street went amount of cash before the into a brief lockdown as police swarmed the neighman fled, Smith said. The robber is described borhood. The investigation was as a man, possibly in his 60s, with gray hair and ongoing Tuesday afternoon, Smith said. glasses. The most recent bank He was wearing a darkhooded jacket, light-colored robbery that occurred in Port Angeles happened in pants and brown shoes. Officers responded September 2009, Smith immediately after the said. Anyone with info about report, and it “became clear very quickly that there had the robbery or the man been a bank robbery,” Smith police seek is asked to phone police at 360-452-4545. said in a news release. Information also can be A containment perimeter was established around left anonymously through the bank as Port Angeles CrimeNet on the Clallam police, Clallam County County Sheriff’s Office site sheriff’s deputies, Elwha at clallam.net/sheriff. Click on “Anonymous police, Coast Guard special agents and Olympic Penin- Tips” in the “Quick Links.”
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to jail for not paying fines, Beaver said, “It’s all about the money.” The lawsuit seeks a court order requiring Benton County to create a constitutional system to collect fines. The named plaintiffs are Jayne Fuentes, Gina Taggart, and Reese Groves, all of whom have been jailed or forced into manual labor because they couldn’t pay fines related to misdemeanor theft or other convictions. All three still owe thousands of dollars and fear they could be jailed in the future, the lawsuit said.
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It detailed the practice in a report last year that drew objections from the court’s judges, one of whom argued that defendants have an opportunity to speak up at sentencing if they can’t afford the fines. “The misnomer is that we’re imposing jail time without any due process rights,” Judge Joseph M. Burrowes told The Associated Press at the time. “We are following the law. We are doing what is just and fair.” The court did not immediately return a message seeking comment Tuesday, but Benton County Prosecutor Andy Miller said he told judges and county commissioners two years ago that he does not agree with the practice. “The judges do it, and there’s not even a prosecutor in the courtroom,” he said Tuesday.
“The judges do it, and there’s not even a prosecutor in the courtroom.”
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015
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NEAH BAY — A Sequim man is expected to be charged today with allegedly shooting at a vehicle that was occupied by his girlfriend just outside of Neah Bay, the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office said. John Thomas Moniz, 38, remained in the Clallam County jail Tuesday on $25,000 bail. He was arrested Saturday for investigation of first-degree assault with domestic violence. Sheriff’s Deputy Ronald Cameron said in court papers that he encountered a GMC Yukon that was parked in the westbound lane of Bayview Avenue at about 8:30 a.m. Saturday. Cameron said he stopped to help a woman who was moving around inside the SUV.
Said he didn’t shoot
Moniz told Cameron he did not shoot at the SUV. He said he did not have possession of the gun when it was fired. “He said he threw the gun into the woods,” Cameron said. “He wanted to make Woman frantic sure no one else could “When I contacted the use the gun so he threw female she was frantic it, the clip and the bullets and afraid,” Cameron into the woods.” wrote in the certification Another deputy found for probable cause. a rifle described by Moniz The woman said she while Moniz was being and Moniz had been evaluated for an undisarguing when her boyclosed medical condition friend stopped the vehiat Forks Community cle, grabbed a rifle from Hospital, Cameron said. the center console area Moniz was booked and ran up a hill to the into the jail in Port Angesouth, court papers said. les at 7:23 p.m. Saturday. “Once he reached the Although the incident top of the hill he turned occurred within the around and began yelling boundaries of the Makah at her,” Cameron wrote in tribal reservation, the the arrest report. Sheriff’s Office is in “She then heard a charge of the investigashot. tion because Moniz and “She heard the glass the alleged victim are not shattering in the rear tribal members, Cameron window of the vehicle said.
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and the bullet went past her head,” Cameron added. “She said the bullet John fired was only feet away from her head. [The woman] believed if I had not arrived John would have killed her.” Cameron observed what appeared to be bullet holes in the rear windows of both the driver’s and passenger’s sides. A man later identified as Moniz came out of the tree line about 100 yards from the vehicle, which had been parked in the 4000 block of Bayview Avenue.
BY ROB OLLIKAINEN
Lake Crescent area
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Deputies: Sequim man shot at SUV near Neah Bay
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Clallam adds Crescent access point to inventory BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — There’s a new public access point on Lake Crescent. Clallam County commissioners Tuesday authorized the acquisition of a 1.2-acre parcel on the southwest shore of the iconic lake at Eagle Point off U.S. Highway 101 about a mile east of Fairholme. A private landowner donated the $43,725 parcel to the county to be used for public access. There are no deed restrictions or limitations associated with the transfer, county Parks, Fair and Facilities Director Joel Winborn said. The county Park and Recreation Board voted unanimously to recommend the property acquisition July 1. “Park staff also believes this would be a welcome addition to our park system and would increase opportunities for users to access this incredible lake,” Winborn
said Tuesday. “I just think it’s a great opportunity.” The parcel will remain undeveloped except for perhaps a picnic table and an opening through the existing guardrail. Winborn said there is enough room for about four vehicles to park at the access point, where people can now take pictures, swim or launch a kayak without trespassing. “I think it’s a great piece of property,” said Commissioner Mike Chapman, who expressed his thanks to the property owner. Chapman and Commissioner Bill Peach voted to authorize the land transfer after a short public hearing Tuesday. Commissioner Jim McEntire was absent because he was participating in a state Board of Natural Resources meeting in Olympia. McEntire was supportive of the property acquisition when it was discussed in a Sept. 21 board work session.
The property is part of an estate in which the heir has no ties to the area. The family trust agreed to pay any back taxes prior to the transfer, Winborn said.
Surrounded by park The property is surrounded by Olympic National Park, as is Clallam Countyowned Camp David Jr. on the north side of the lake. “The park has no issues or requires any paperwork for this acquisition,” Winborn said. Civil Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Kristina NelsonGross said the park will be simply an adjacent property owner. “There are no ties to the park unless this board would choose to make them,” Nelson-Gross told commissioners. Said Chapman: “I think we’ll just keep it simple.” Public access to freshwater and saltwater is the top priority in the county’s parks
and recreation master plan and a long-standing directive of the Board of County Commissioners. Meanwhile, commissioners Monday discussed a request from the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center, known by the acronym SARC, to consider funding a portion of a $36,000 feasibility study. The study would look at a possible partnership between the center and the Olympic Peninsula YMCA, which would manage the exercise facility. County Administrator Jim Jones said the county has about $8,000 available in miscellaneous funds. Commissioners agreed, without a vote, that they would match a donation from the city of Sequim up to $6,000. The Sequim City Council tabled action on a request to contribute until a meeting Monday. “I would very much like for the county to participate in this thing,” McEntire said.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015
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Gary Locke to speak at Dem benefit Ticket prices to increase after Saturday PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
CHRIS MCDANIEL/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
The Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center, located at 610 N. Fifth Ave., includes the city’s only public pool.
Survey about YMCA-SARC partnership begins Thursday Phone study to gauge interest in proposal to hand over management BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — Beginning Thursday, several thousand Sequim-area residents will receive survey phone calls to gauge community interest in a proposal by the Olympic Peninsula YMCA to manage the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center. The exercise facility at 610 N. Fifth Ave., known as SARC, includes the city’s only public pool. The phone survey will be conducted through Oct. 24. Residents who do not receive a phone call during that time frame but would like to provide feedback can do so by visiting http:// tinyurl.com/SARC-YMCASurvey. “As we look to continually deepen our impact, meet the ever-changing needs of our communities and align ourselves with like-minded organizations, gathering the proper data
from our target market is essential,” said Kyle Cronk, YMCA CEO. “This is about volume. We are trying to call a lot of people to get [their] opinions. We want everyone to share whatever they think.” The callers will “identify themselves from Strategic Research Associates” and will not ask for personally identifiable information, Cronk said. The Spokane company is conducting the feasibility study at a cost of about $36,000, Cronk said. YMCA, SARC, Olympic Medical Center and private donors are funding the survey. The City Council tabled action on a request to contribute until a meeting Monday. The Clallam County commissioners agreed without a vote Tuesday that they would match a city of Sequim contribution up to $6,000. The hospital is participating because “YMCAs
VOTE
across the country and right here on the Peninsula are recognized leaders in health and well-being,” said Eric Lewis, OMC CEO. “Collaborating with organizations such as the Y and SARC is a natural fit.” Following receipt of the market feasibility data collected during surveying, the collaborating organizations will determine if the project is operationally sustainable. If so, YMCA officials said they will present the SARC board later this year with a proposal for operating the facility. “We would propose to the SARC board, and then they would determine if they liked the agreement,” Cronk said.
Exploring a partnership The SARC board and YMCA announced last month they were considering a partnership in which the Y would assume management of the facility. The SARC board had said the facility would close by September 2016 because
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Diana came to Crestwood post surgically for removal of a left frontal lobe brain tumor. She was experiencing progressive weakness and confusion, along with word finding difficulties when she was hospitalized. She arrived with weakness specifically on the side of her body; she was unable to write or tie her shoes as she once had. Within days, Diane was able to maneuver in her wheel chair around the facility, always smiling and willing to work with her occupational, speech and physical therapists. She eventually graduated to using a rolling walker, improvising her balance and endurance in standing to complete valued tasks such as jamming with her husband, Ron, as he would frequently bring in their music book and play Bluegrass tunes. They have spent many years together attending Bluegrass festivals and it was evident that as Diane progressed in her therapy, she was able to easier engage in playing her baritone ukulele or guitar as Ron strummed his mandolin by her side, both singing to their hearts content, bringing smiles and tapping toes to those who stopped to listen. Within a few weeks, Diane progressed to walking without an assistive device and was found many times in occupational therapy doing the “electric slide,” confidently completing the grapevine with ease. By the end of her time at Crestwood, she easily was able to care for herself, completing her basic routine with independence, accessing medical appointments with her husband and socializing within the facility with ease. We wish her the best of luck and will miss her!!
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________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
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dor to China in 2014 after becoming the envoy to China in 2011. He now is working as a senior adviser and consultant to the Davis Wright Tremaine law firm in Seattle. He had been a partner in the firm from 2005 to 2009. Locke served as U.S. secretary of commerce from 2009 to 2011. He was elected governor in 1996, the first ChineseAmerican governor in the nation’s history, and was re-elected in 2000. “As governor of Washington state, U.S. secretary of commerce and most recently as America’s envoy to China, Gary Locke has been a leader in the areas of education, employment, trade, health care, human rights, immigration reform, privacy and the environment,” the Democrats said in a news release. Locke also was elected to the state House of Representatives in 1982 to represent Seattle’s 37th District. Born in Seattle, Locke graduated from Yale and holds a law degree from Boston University. He and his wife, Mona Lee Locke, have three children.
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of a lack of funds, even with a cutback in hours that began Monday. SARC was formed as Clallam County Parks and Recreation District 1, a junior taxing district, in 1988. It has not collected taxes since 2003 and has operated on reserves. Voters rejected a proposed levy in February. In August, they rejected the proposed formation of a metropolitan park district to solely fund SARC.
PORT ANGELES — Gary Locke — former Washington state governor, U.S. secretary of commerce and ambassador to China — will speak at the Clallam County Democrats’ annual fundraiser, the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Dinner. The dinner will be from 4:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 23, in Club Seven lounge at 7 C e d a r s Locke Casino in Blyn. Individual tickets are $55 if purchased before Saturday and $60 afterward. A table of eight costs $40 if purchased before Saturday. Tickets can be purchased online at http:// tinyurl.com/PDNRooseveltdinner or by sending a check to Clallam County Democrats, P.O. Box 2454, Port Angeles, WA 98362. The evening will begin with a meet-and-greet from 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. and continue with a buffet dinner from 5:30 p.m. to 6:45 p.m. The program in which Locke will give his keynote address will be from 6:45 p.m. to 8 p.m. Locke, 65, stepped down from the post of ambassa-
e was elected governor in 1996, the first Chinese-American governor in the nation’s history, and was re-elected in 2000.
You are not alone. Over 1,300 county residents will lose their coverage for 2016. What: Castell Insurance will be hosting informational seminars to explain what your options are. When: October 9th 9am, Noon & 3pm October 14th 9am, Noon & 3pm Where: Holiday Inn Express, 1441 E. Washington St, Sequim Seating is limited and reservations are highly suggested.
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Groups gather to test wine and home brew during the Fish N Brew at the Old Mill Roundhouse in Forks in 2013.
KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Crowds line up outside the Dungeness Crab & Seafood Festival main tent to purchase a crab dinner at the festival last year.
Crab Fest scuttles into Port Angeles this Friday Daily News’ Community Crab Feed nearby that will last until 10 p.m. Admission costs $25 for the feast PORT ANGELES — Mention of crab, cole slaw and corn on the Dungeness in England, and folks cob. think you’re talking about historic Nine other restaurants will ruins, a steam railway and a offer crab and other seafood nuclear power plant that lure tourincluding calamari, clam chowder, ists to the Kentish Coast. cod, halibut, oysters, salmon, In Port Angeles this time of year, shrimp and tuna, plus side dishes the word means crab, more crab ranging from blackberry pie to and still more crab at the Dungequesadillas. ness Crab & Seafood Festival at and Participants can burn off some of around City Pier at Lincoln Street their caloric intake at a “Learn to and Railroad Avenue starting FriRow” seminar offered by the Olymday. pic Peninsula Rowing Association at Crab? It’s named for the village 9 a.m. Saturday; at the Crab Fest 5K and spit near Sequim that were Fun Run starting at City Pier and named in turn after their southeast continuing on the Olympic Discovery English namesake. Trail; and at 5-, 10- and 14-kilometer Ruins? Consider the piles of walks starting from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. shells from the thousands of crusta- Saturday from the William Shore ceans that will feed visitors to the Memorial Pool, 225 E. Fifth St. annual three-day seafood fest that The walks, sponsored by the will occupy downtown Port Angeles. Evergreen State Volkssporting AssoSteam? There’ll be clouds of it as ciation and the Olympic Peninsula the crabs are cooked to tasty tender- Explorers, are free. They will follow ness. the Olympic Discovery Trail, with Electricity? Plenty of it will be walkers required to finish by 4 p.m. generated by great food, live enterFor details, contact Janet Lentainment, arts and crafts, environ- fant at 360-681-5405 or jlenfant@ mental and Native American yahoo.com or George Christensen at tribal education and — just added 360-697-2172 or 360-473-473-8398. to the activities — a Coast Guard air-sea mock rescue of a person in Live music and more the water at 2 p.m. Saturday from Live music at the Crab Fest City Pier. Stage at City Pier will run from Events will take place on the pier, Hollywood Beach, the Olympic noon to 10 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to noon Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Discovery Trail and The Gateway center at Front and Lincoln Streets. Sunday and feature country, rock, jazz, Latin, bluegrass, reggae and Most are free. original ballads and roots music. Arts and crafts booths will open at noon Friday on the pier, the same The Feiro Marine Life Center time for the start of the Peninsula will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. BY JAMES CASEY
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
_______ Reporter James Casey can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jcasey@ peninsuladailynews.com.
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FORKS — Hickory Shirt-Heritage Days 2015 begins today with the theme “Echoes of Axes,” celebrating the history and heritage of timber communities on the West End. Residents are urged to wear their hickory shirts all week or clothing items made from the tough bluegray and white striped cloth that became the de facto uniform of early loggers. The celebration will begin at 7:30 a.m. today at the Rainforest Arts Center, 35 N. Forks Ave., where the Pioneer Logger Award will be presented to the 2015 recipient, Jack Merrick, 87. The morning ceremony and meeting will include the showing of a short film, “Sheldon Remains.” It was filmed in Forks. Directed by Corbin Frost, it tells of the coming-of-age of an injured logger. The Forks Timber Museum will be open for free from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today through Saturday and from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. The museum, located at 1421 S. Forks Ave., features displays of images and artifacts from early homesteading, farming and logging in the Pacific Northwest. The Old Timers Roundtable, from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. today at the Rainforest Arts Center, will include a book signing and slide presentations. Jack Zaccardo will show a slide presentation of historic photographs of the Forks area. Larry Burtness will pres-
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ent a comedic slideshow, “A Mechanic’s View of Logging by Ken Sadilek.” Several local authors will attend with local history books they have published.
Thursday Movie night at the Rainforest Arts Center will continue the logging theme with the short documentary “Cuts” about the hard work and danger of employment at a 1970s-era mill located near Lake Pleasant. The feature film will be “Sometimes a Great Notion,” released in 1970, which was directed by and starred the late Paul Newman. The film follows the story of a family of Oregon loggers struggling to keep a family business alive in changing times. The doors will open at 6 p.m., and the first of two films will begin at 6:30 p.m. Entry is free. Concessions, including pizza and soda, are available by donation by the Forks Chamber of Commerce. Additional events will continue through Sunday.
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Friday and Saturday. Meanwhile, arts, crafts and food booths will reopen from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday and feature more than 83 vendors of woodworking, fiber arts, ceramics, metal craft, jewelry, glass fine art and rocks and gems, plus informational booths of nonprofit groups. The Grab-A-Crab Derby will run from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. both days, and the Port Angeles Likes Bikes Corral will continue offering secure bike storage at The Gateway. There, food demonstrations will run from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and until 4 p.m. Sunday. Also Sunday, a Crab Revival musical/non-denominational service will start at 9 a.m. at The Gateway, where public tasting for the Chowder Cook-Off will last from noon to 2 p.m., when winners will be announced. The festival will end at 5 p.m. Sunday. Copies of the PDN’s 20-page special section on the festival are available at the newspaper office, 305 W. First St., between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays. Online details are available at www.crabfestival.org. The festival is one of the North Olympic Peninsula’s premier events both for residents and visitors, many of whom will travel from Victoria to take advantage of special travel packages on Black Ball’s MV Coho.
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BY MARK SWANSON PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A North Olympic Peninsula carpet retailer will host an event today to raise awareness for Building for America’s Bravest, a nonprofit program that builds homes for catastrophically injured veterans. America’s Bravest representatives will be at McCrorie Carpet One locations in Port Hadlock at 10 a.m., Sequim at noon and Port Angeles at 2 p.m. today. They will present owner David McCrorie with a shadowbox plaque in honor of his participation with the organization through the Carpet One cooperative.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The trial of a Sequim man charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of a Port Angeles man in May 2014 has been rescheduled for late February. Nathaniel Darren Olson, 28, had been scheduled to go to trial Monday in the killing of 25-year-old Matthew R. Baker, but on Sept. 10, the case was rescheduled for Feb. 29 as part of an order for continuance issued by Clallam County Superior Court. The continuance was issued because Olson’s attorney, Karen Unger of Port Angeles, is representing a client in a different case out of the area at this time, according to the county Prosecuting Attorney’s Office. This is the fourth time the jury trial has been reset since the shooting. The three previous resets were due to the delay of DNA evidence tests. Olson has waived his right to a speedy trial. He is charged with second-degree murder with a firearm enhancement for allegedly shooting Baker following an altercation with another man at a birthday party at 1523 Monroe Road early May 22, 2014. Baker died of a single gunshot wound to the chest, an autopsy revealed.
merica’s Bravest representatives will present owner David McCrorie with a shadowbox plaque in honor of his participation with the organization through the Carpet One cooperative.
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Builds ‘smart homes’ America’s Bravest, said McCrorie, honors service and sacrifice by building “smart homes” with technology designed to meet the needs of veterans who have lost multiple limbs in the line of duty. The homes include w h e e l ch a i r- a c c e s s i b l e kitchen countertops and bathroom fixtures with electronic controls that can often be accessed from a smartphone. Building for America’s Bravest is a program of the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation, which honors Stephen Siller, a New York City fireman who lost his life after running with a full backpack from the Battery Tunnel to the World Trade Center to save disaster victims on 9/11. McCrorie said he has met members of the Siller family at Carpet One meetings. Brothers George, Russ and Frank Siller started the foundation to honor their brother, Stephen, in 2001. Since an initial 5K race
in 2002, the foundation has raised more than $10 million to help wounded firefighters, military members and orphaned children through America’s Bravest and other programs. The Sillers, McCrorie said, have “taken this foundation beyond what most people can believe.” Through the foundation, he said, “many families can live normally, even though they’ve suffered lost limbs and burns.” McCrorie Carpet One is located at 11662 Rhody Drive in Port Hadlock, 279 W. Washington St. in Sequim and 547 N. Oakridge Drive, Port Angeles. For information, contact McCrorie Carpet One at 360-457-7500. For more on Building for America’s Bravest, see www.ourbravest.org.
Maintains innocence
________
Olson has maintained his innocence and currently is not in custody. Sheriff’s deputies and a
Reporter Mark Swanson can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5054, or mswanson@peninsula dailynews.com.
Port Angeles police officer said they found a “heavily intoxicated” Olson lying on the living room floor near Baker’s body when they responded to a 9-1-1 call, according to the arrest narrative. Attendees of the birthday party identified Olson as the suspected shooter, authorities said. A witness told investigators he heard a shot, went upstairs to the living room and heard Olson say, “I shot him,” court papers said. Another witness said there had been a fight between Baker and another man, David Holden, before the shooting. The witness said she was taking shots of alcohol with a group of people in the dining area when she heard a “pop” from the living room. Olson purportedly told the witness that Baker “came at me.” Investigators found a .45-caliber Sig Sauer pistol in the residence and a
.45-caliber bullet near Baker’s body. Olson was registered with a concealed-pistol license at the time, according to the arrest narrative. Several pieces of evidence were sent to a State Patrol crime lab.
Bail reduced Olson’s bail was reduced from $500,000 to $75,000 in June 2014 after Unger argued Olson had no violent history, held a steady job as a geoduck diver and had strong ties to Clallam County. Olson posted bail June 10, 2014, and was placed on an alcohol monitoring bracelet. He was allowed to remove the device a week later because of the potential for its damage because of his work as a diver.
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
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One of the representatives will be a New York City firefighter who participated in the search and recovery efforts following the collapse of the World Trade Center buildings Sept. 11, 2001. McCrorie said the Peninsula stores, as part of Carpet One, support America’s Bravest heavily — not just financially, but by providing flooring products in the homes the program builds. The nearest veteran project home is currently being considered for the metro Seattle area, he said. There are no other projects being contemplated for
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Western Washington, but if there were, McCrorie said, he would supply the flooring. Although not a veteran, McCrorie considers himself deeply patriotic and a “staunch supporter” of those who have served our country.
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Trial for Sequim man delayed
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Group takes on climate change with initiative BY PHUONG LE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE — A coalition of diverse groups is launching a new initiative effort to tackle climate change, raising the prospect that Washington voters could face two statewide ballot measures on carbon pollution next year. The Alliance for Jobs and Clean Energy on Tuesday announced plans to put a climate initiative before voters in November 2016. Their effort aims to reduce greenhouse gas emisCHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS sions, put a price on carbon pollution and use that money to invest in clean energy, OING GREEN communities or other proGrant Street Elementary School second-graders Nico McCracken, left, and Owen Fulton, grams, though details have both 7, finish up their lunch Tuesday. The Port Townsend School system is now using not been worked out yet. The idea is to curb carpredominantly local and organic ingredients in its food program and is for the first time bon pollution while also using silverware instead of disposable plastic utensils. raising money for jobs, clean energy and minority and low-income communities that are disproportionately harmed by climate change, said Rich Stolz, executive director of OneAmerica, corner of Lincoln and Front nity volunteers and Chima- District 3, at 7 p.m. Tuesday. which is part of the alliance. “What we need is a meacum School students helped The forum will be in the streets. sure that moves the ball plant almost 600 native Grange Hall at 50870 state “The Crab Festival is one forward, (that) doesn’t solve trees and shrubs in a buffer Highway 112. of the biggest events of the one problem and create along Chimacum Creek on Invited to participate year, and we are happy to are incumbent county Com- more problems,” he said, move the market for a day to this piece of farmland. adding that racial and social On Thursday, volunteers missioner Jim McEntire, accommodate it,” market PORT ANGELES — On equity will be central to it. R-Sequim, and challenger Manager Cynthia Warne said. will help land trust staff Saturday, the Port Angeles The alliance includes assess plant survival so as Mark Ozias, D-Sequim. For more information, Farmers Market will move more than 100 supporters, to plan for replanting if Also invited are port phone Warne at 360-460to the Vern Burton Comincluding labor, environnecessary. commission candidates 0361. munity Center parking lot mental, faith-based and The driveway leading to Connie Beauvais of Joyce for one day only to allow minority groups. Chimacum Commons is on and Mike Breidenbach of Work party slated Rhody Drive directly across the Dungeness Crab & Forks, both of whom are CHIMACUM — The Seafood Festival the use of Initiative 732 from Cenex in Chimacum. running for the seat to be Jefferson Land Trust will The Gateway pavilion. A Jefferson Land Trust vacated by Commissioner Meanwhile, organizers host a work party at ChiThe Vern Burton center sandwich board sign will John Calhoun. The port of a competing effort, Initiaparking lot is on the corner of macum Commons at point to parking area in election is nonpartisan. tive 732, want to tax every 10 a.m. Thursday. Peabody and Fourth streets the field. Each candidate will be metric ton of carbon dioxide Participation is free. in downtown Port Angeles. For more information, given five minutes to emissions of fossil fuels sold Earlier this year, commu- contact Carrie Clendaniel The Gateway is at the speak, followed by five to or used in the state. at 360-379-9501, ext 109, or six minutes of questions. The tax goes to $25 a ton cclendaniel@saveland.org. Loren Kreutner, forum in the second year, and gradorganizer, said he expects ually increases over time. Grange forum the forum to be finished by I-732 revenues would be used to cut the state sales JOYCE — The Crescent 8:30 p.m. Drennan-Ford Funeral Donna Faye Charles For more information, tax by one point, eliminate Grange will host candidates Home, Port Angeles, is in business taxes for manufacJan. 25, 1936 — Oct. 3, 2015 for Clallam County commis- call Kreutner at 360-958charge of arrangements. turers and help working 9402 or 360-477-9818. sioner, District 1, and Port of Port Angeles resident www.drennanford.com Port Angeles commissioner, Peninsula Daily News families, supporters said. Donna Faye Charles died of age-related causes at Olym- Rebecca Challys pic Medical Center in Port Samson Angeles. She was 79. Services: Vigil service Oct. 19, 1941 — Oct. 2, 2015 at the Lower Elwha Tribal Rebecca Challys Samson outdoorsman. He loved to ROY J. ‘RICK’ MELVIN ROBERT Center, 2851 Lower Elwha died of cancer in Sequim. especially loved to ‘MOKE’ HAMILTON SR. hunt, Road, Port Angeles, at She was 73. fish and enjoyed farming, Services: To be 7 p.m. today. A funeral will SAMPSON SR. October 4, 1934 gardening and working take place at the tribal cen- announced. September 12, 2015 with wood. August 21, 1944 Linde-Price Funeral Serter at 10 a.m. Thursday, September 30, 2015 He is survived by his with burial to follow at the vice, Sequim, is in charge of Roy J. “Rick” Hamilton wife, Darlene Hamilton of arrangements. Place Indian Cemetery, Sr., an 80-year-old resiMelvin Robert SampSequim; sons Steven J. lindefuneralservice.com Place Road, Port Angeles. dent of Sequim, passed son Sr. of the Lower (Cathy) Hamilton of away in Port Angeles on Elwha community of Port Fountain, Colorado, JefSeptember 12, 2015, due frey L. (Kathi) Hamilton of Angeles passed away at to natural causes. his home of cancer on Tacoma and Brian S. Rick was born to September 30, 2015. He (Tatjana) Hamilton of Franklin George Hamilton was 71 years old. Dubai; sister Hazel Sutand Ruth Kathryn McKHe was born to ton of Campbell, New enzie Hamilton on OctoEdward and Hazel York; brothers Franklin G. ber 4, 1934, in Urbana, Sampson in Port Angeles Hamilton Jr. of New IpsNew York. on August 21, 1944. wich, New Hampshire, He married Darlene He served his country and Bill Hamilton of Hamilton on July 21, in the United States Enosburg Falls, Vermont; 1956, in Tacoma, WashMarine Corps, joining and numerous grandchilington April 5, 1962, and servHe served his country dren and great-grandchiling for five years. www.mtnviewhearing.com dren. in the U.S. Air Force for Moke married Karen He was preceded in 15 years as a technical Nelson on August 18, death by his son Roy J. sergeant and five years 1989, in Snohomish, HEARING AID CENTERS, INC. Hamilton Jr., brother in the U.S. Navy, and Washington. Port Angeles Sequim Robert Hamilton and sisafter retirement went on They had 26 wonder504 E. 8th St., Suite F 625 N. 5th Ave., Suite 3 ters Winnifred Hamilton, to open and operate his ful years together. Mon-Thurs 9-4 Mon-Thurs 9-4 Mildred Hamilton, Irene He is survived by his own appliance repair (360) 452-1188 (360) 681-4481 Hale and Eleanore Hamwife, Karen Sampson; business, Rick’s Appliilton. son Melvin Sampson Jr. ance, for an additional At his request, there of Lower Elwha; daughter 15 years. will be no services. Lana Sampson of Lower Mr. Hamilton was a Elwha; stepchildren DarPlease make memopast commander of the rell Charles Jr., Louise rial donations to your Veterans of Foreign Wars STARTING AT WITH THESE Rose, Craig Charles and Post 4760 and an avid favorite charity. SAVINGS $
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Briefly . . .
PA Farmers Market moves this Saturday
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Death and Memorial Notice
The proposal is modeled after a revenue-neutral carbon tax that British Columbia put in place in 2008. Joseph Ryan, a board member of the I-732 campaign, said Tuesday that he welcomed the alliance’s announcement and wishes them well. His group still plans to move forward with its own effort, said Ryan, a past president of Washington Environment Council, which is a member of the Alliance for Jobs and Clean Energy. The dual initiative efforts come as the state Department of Ecology is writing rules to cap greenhouse gases from about 35 large industrial emitters in the state, just months after Gov. Jay Inslee failed to pass his ambitious cap-and-trade plan. The governor directed the agency to come up with a binding limit on carbon pollution after failing to get legislative approval for his proposal to charge emissions from oil refineries, power plants and fuel suppliers.
Signatures needed I-732 supporters need to collect about 246,372 valid signatures from registered voters by the end of the year to put the measure before the Legislature next year. If lawmakers don’t act, it would go on the 2016 ballot. Ryan said they have collected 256,000 signatures so far and feel confident they’ll get enough by the end of this year. Leaders of the Alliance for Jobs and Clean Energy have opposed the carbon-tax initiative, saying their polling results show that voters will reject that measure. They also say it doesn’t do enough to address the disproportionate impact of climate change on low-income and minority communities.
Death and Memorial Notice
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■ Death and Memorial Notice obituaries chronicle a deceased’s life. Call 360-452-8435 Monday through Friday. A form is at www. peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” ■ Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased, including service information and mortuary, appears once at no charge. For further information, call 360-417-3527.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Wednesday, October 7, 2015 PAGE
A13
When ‘something else’ is home I’M ALWAYS TELLING people that I love reading for book clubs. “It’s the intimacy of the group,” I tell them, “and the fact that they chose my book feels like a great compliment.” I recently read for a book club in Bothell. The women went way, way back with each other. Most of them were born in the area. I almost felt guilty for interrupting their closeness. It wasn’t that they didn’t help me feel welcome, but the opposite; they were inviting and warm. And they got me to thinking a lot about transience on my drive back to the ferry. I was happy to return to my home, but a sense of isolation started to creep in. No matter how many years I live in the Pacific Northwest, I thought, I will never be of here.
I’d chosen. And because I don’t have family to turn to, the people I have learned to trust have become my family. in the Mary Lou way“Not We look in on each other’s they are,” I pets and plants and children. Sanelli said aloud. One of my neighbors calls us I thought “birders” because we keep such about how so many of us set- good track of each other. The most unexpected outcome tle where supis that my friends have taught port is built in. me how to be a better family In other words, we settle member. By accepting me as I am, they where family teach me how to be more true to lives. myself when I’m around my real Others, family. No small solace. where family The first time I saw the Olymdoes not. And I thought about how I fell pic Mountains rising out of the into the second category right out clouds, I felt breathless, the air of high school, when I went look- knocked out of me. This kind of connection is ing for “something else” and powerful, and I couldn’t let anynever turned back. one talk me into coming home. At one point during my I thought, “That’s behind me drive, I felt like I needed to brace myself against the steering now. I am home.” wheel and hold steady to the life And that’s why it’s difficult to
FROM A WRITER’S NOTEBOOK
Peninsula Voices Climate change Regarding the Sept. 30 letter “Ozias critic,” the writer should really do his research before he makes the claims he did in his letter. First, the climatologist he quotes does not have a degree in climate research but rather geography. Plus, his resume his sketchy at best. One can go to http:// tinyurl.com/PDN-wikipedia ball to read about this socalled climate scientist. Quoting what one scientist believes does not make it correct. With more than 97 percent of the world’s scientists believing in climate change, it is beyond dispute. Second, the writer praises the tax cut authored by Mr. [Jim] McEntire. Does he realize that this tax cut only applied in unincorporated Clallam County? Citizens in the towns and cities of Clallam County have the same taxes they had before this so-called cut. Go to the state Department of Revenue website [www.dor.wa.gov] and see for yourself. The writer also makes
the claim that computer models are nothing more than “magic eight-balls,” when nothing is further from the truth. These models have been responsible for many of the changes that have benefited all of us. Again, a statement without fact to back it up. The Republican Party of this country is the only major political party in the world to deny climate change, according to the Sept. 27 New York magazine issue. To quote the letter writer, “That is hubris, not pragmatism.” One has to wonder how they can continue to behave in this manner. Scott Clausen, Sequim sity of London (England), Queen Mary College.” Clausen is a Democrat precinct committee officer in Tasty bluegill the Sequim area of Robin Having grown up in the Hill. Midwest, where I fished the EDITOR’S NOTE: Tim lakes from the time I was Ball said the following to the old enough to hold a pole, I Canada Free Press in a Feb. am familiar with the bluegill or sunfish. 7, 2007 interview: “I have a They are good eating. Ph.D in geography with a We also caught crappies, specific focus on historical climatology from the Univer- bass, walleye and northern
OUR
put a name to what I started to feel even before I put my key in the ignition. As if part of me was already floating away, searching. But it wasn’t only the book club. Fall always does this to me. I should be used to it, this sitting here, trying to capture how it feels to have a recurring homing impairment. Half of the reason is due to the fact that I live in a free culture, blessed with a dizzying array of choices. The downside? My imagination tends to outpace the reality of where I live with the possibilities of where I could live. The other half is part of a larger story. I’m a daughter of immigrants. My parents moved away in order to move forward. They stuck their necks out. And I am a little more rootless because of it.
But years ago, I decided that, given a choice between feeling a little lost as the sunshine declines and continually moving on, I’d gratefully go with the former. I was meant to visit this book club. It reminded me that by sharing my work with a tight-knit group of wine-sipping strangers (to me, anyway), I’d stuck my neck out, too. Maybe not as far, but still. And you can’t stick your neck out without getting a good, long peek inside.
________ Mary Lou Sanelli, writer, poet and performer, divides her time between Port Townsend and Seattle. She can be reached via her website, www.marylousanelli.com. Her column appears on the first Wednesday of the month. The next installment will appear Nov. 4.
READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL
pike and perch. The lakes froze over in the wintertime, so we cut a hole. The fish were especially tasty coming out of that cold water. I don’t know if the bluegill will destroy the salmon eggs, as I doubt anyone knows, but for my money (dare I say this?), I would rather eat a sunfish any day over a sockeye.
There is no need for a change because the district is well-run, on budget and effective for the citizens it serves, thanks in large part to Mike’s steady, experienced and proven leadership. He was selected by the other two serving commissioners to serve out the term of a previous commissioner because of his nearly decade-long volunteer fire service and respected contribution to the department. Mike is retired and has the time and dedication to devote to the position, which he has demonstrated over the past two years as commissioner. His prudent management coupled with his solid leadership ability has contributed greatly to a wellJust a thought. run, frugal and efficient fire Leslie David Jensen, district. You can trust that his Port Angeles continued leadership ensures the professional Re-elect Gawley delivery of fire and medical Michael Gawley is a cur- services for District No. 3. rent fire commissioner for It ain’t broke, so it does [Clallam County] Fire Disnot need fixin’. trict No. 3, and he should be Re-elect G. Michael Gawre-elected because he is ley commissioner for Fire doing a terrific job and is a District No. 3. proven and effective comAlan Barnard, Port Angeles missioner.
Attack of the killer bluegills FOR FISH, IT was another tough week in the news. An invasion of the dreaded Pat bluegill into Neal Lake Sutherland threatens the sockeye salmon that could live there someday. Bluegills are a warm-water species from down south. Lake Sutherland, which is just west of Port Angeles, was one of the finest fishing lakes ever created. It’s drained by Indian Creek. In prehistoric times, there was a Klallam village located at the mouth of Indian Creek at its confluence with the Elwha. Indian Creek was noted for its runs of steelhead, a sea-run rainbow trout, and bluebacks, a popular name for sockeye salmon.
The sockeye have always been valued for their beauty and the quality of their blood-red flesh. Sockeye generally run up rivers that have a lake where the adults can spawn and the juveniles can spend the first year of their lives. As the sockeye head upstream to their spawning grounds, their appearance changes from the blue backs and silver bellies of ocean fish to spawners with red bodies, green heads and hooked noses. Dewey Sisson, a hunting guide who ranged throughout the Elwha watershed, said Lake Sutherland was full of salmon in November 1897. We can assume some of these were sockeye. Once the Elwha River dams were built in the early 1900s, the Lake Sutherland sockeye and the Indian Creek village disappeared. With the removal of the dams, it was hoped sockeye would mag-
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ically return to the lake. Without a concerted effort to transplant other Olympic Peninsula sockeye, this could be a long and lonely wait. Sockeye are very picky about where they spawn. Sockeye salmon first colonized Lake Sutherland after the last Ice Age, about 12,000 years ago. Just how many years it took for random fish to discover Lake Sutherland and create a salmon run is unknown. Since that time, the environment has been impacted by another invasive species: humans. Our technological wonders have created one of the largest mass extinctions of flora and fauna in the history of our planet. We are left with nothing but a dream of imaginary fish — like the Lake Sutherland sockeye returning someday. Still, we don’t want bluegills to endanger our sockeye, no matter how imaginary they are.
Make no mistake. Getting rid of the bluegill will be no easy task. Killing off our inexhaustible runs of salmon took decades of concerted effort before they could finally be declared threatened, endangered or extinct. By following the same management methodology that our fisheries co-managers employed on our salmon, we should be able to eliminate those pesky bluegill. There can be no finer example of effective fish management than the Dungeness River, where more than 20 years of restoration efforts have produced four species of threatened or endangered fish that hover on the brink of extinction. To deal effectively with the bluegill, we’ll declare it an endangered species. Then, by following the Dungeness model, we’ll buy up property from willing sellers. Any obstructionist elements whose bourgeois sensibilities fos-
NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 CHRIS MCDANIEL, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com
ter an antisocial attachment to their docks or homes will become willing sellers once we follow the Dungeness methodology and turn off their water. After removing all evidence of human habitation from the area, we will plant native vegetation so it looks like it did back in 1855. Bluegills are an invasive species, but just remember humans are the worst invasive species on Earth. They built the dams and are responsible for bluegills being in the lake in the first place. Now, it is up to the humans to kill off the bluegills and bring back the sockeye, no matter what the cost or how long it takes.
________ Pat Neal is a fishing guide and “wilderness gossip columnist” whose column appears here every Wednesday. He can be reached at 360-6839867 or by email at patneal wildlife@gmail.com.
HAVE YOUR SAY We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers or websites, anonymous letters, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. We will not publish letters that impugn the personal character of people or of groups of people. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Wednesday, October 7, 2015 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section
B Seahawks
Wilson runs for his life
Hawks honor PT coach Snyder is Coach of the Week PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SOMEONE GET THAT man a towel and some icepacks. Break out the oxygen tank and IV bag. Maybe even grab a bottle of Recovery Water out of the refrigerator. Whatever it takes for Russell Nick Wilson to regain Patterson his vigor, get it to him. He deserves it, and he needs it. The Seattle Seahawks quarterback starred in his own reality television show Monday night, but instead of Monday Night Football it was titled: “Run For Your Life!” Thankfully for the Seahawks, Wilson was able to elude all the obstacles and survive all the predators — barely — to earn the grand prize at the end, a 13-10 Seattle victory over the Detroit Lions. But Wilson needed every single blade of FieldTurf covered by his legs at CenturyLink Next Game Field to pull it off. Sunday Wilson’s passvs. Bengals ing numbers at Cincinnati were those of a quarterback who Time: 10 a.m. On TV: Ch. 13 had himself quite the day: 20 for 26, 287 yards, 125.0 passer rating. They’re the type that suggest a stroll in the park in a what was a blowout victory. But the numbers don’t even begin to tell the story of Wilson’s day. Wilson might as well have been on a track team with the amount of running he was forced to do. He had to run to scramble. He had to run to get passes off. He practically had to run just to complete a handoff. It was fitting that the game’s clinching play, a 50-yard completion to Jermaine Kearse on third-andshort that allowed the Seahawks to run the clock out, came following yet another extended Wilson scramble. TURN
TO
PATTERSON/B3
PORT TOWNSEND — Nick Snyder has been chosen as the Seahawks Coach of the Week by the Washington State Football Coaches Association. Snyder, who has led the Port Townsend Redhawks to a 5-0 start and a No. 8 ranking in the most recent Associated Press high school football poll, was recognized for the award on the video scoreboard during Monday’s NFL game between the Seattle Seahawks and Detroit Lions. “Pretty dang cool,” Snyder said Tuesday afternoon. “I think it’s a great honor for the whole team and all my coaches.” Port Townsend High School first heard about the honor last week. Assistant principal and athletic director Scott Wilson said the Seahawks finally phoned Tuesday morning with more details. “I am proud of Nick Snyder and his staff of Tom Webster, Terry Khile and Rich Hill,” Wilson said in an email. “These gentlemen have all done a great job with our Redhawk football program. “The boys playing for them are fortunate to have such a dedicated group coaching them.
STEVE MULLENSKY/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Port Townsend football coach Nick Snyder, left, signals to his team during last week’s game against Chimacum at Memorial Field. They care about kids . . . and they love teaching the game of football.” Snyder said the Seahawks had tried to contact him Tuesday, but he wasn’t available when they phoned. Wilson said Port Townsend will receive a $500 grant for the
Soule wins first singles match
Preps
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Port Angeles lost at home to Olympic 5-2 in Olympic League boys tennis play. The Roughriders’ top singles player, Janson Pederson, dropped his match to Tye Loan 6-2, 6-1. But Monday’s other two singles matches went three sets and were split by the two teams. Port Angeles’ Hayden Woods defeated Cole Bender 4-6, 6-3,
6-4 in No. 3 singles, while Kenny Soule lost to Olympic’s Tyler Aerne 6-4, 1-6, 7-6. “Kenny Soule fought hard and lost his match in a tough tie-break third set,” Riders coach Gil Stockton said. “Hayden Woods and the doubles team of Hudson Soelter and Kale Mehew went three sets to win their matches by keeping their focus and wanting the match more than their opponents. “The team ball went to Hayden Woods for not only per-
BY TIM BOOTH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Unaware of rule The Seahawks are freely admitting as much after their 13-10 win, with Pete Carroll saying on his radio show on KIRO-AM in Seattle on Tuesday morning that based on what he understood about the rule prior to Monday’s missed call, he would have “done the exact same thing,” as Wright. “I didn’t know the rule either,” Carroll said. “I’ve
in all classifications.
Reinforced Redhawks If there has been a weakness — or, rather, a cause for concern — for Port Townsend has been the depth of the roster. TURN
TO
SNYDER/B3
Trojans overmatch Roughriders
Missed call overshadows Hawks’ dominant defense SEATTLE — If K.J. Wright had simply fallen on the loose ball as it bounced, there would be no controversy hanging over the Seattle Seahawks. Instead, Wright did as he’s been instructed, to make sure the ball didn’t end up back in the hands of the Lions. It was calculated and intentional and added another Monday night controversy to Seattle’s history. Yes, the Seahawks received a break when a flag wasn’t thrown on Wright for illegal batting after he guided Calvin Johnson’s fumble out of the back of the end zone for a touchback, giving Seattle possession.
football program. The Redhawks travel to face Coupeville this Friday at 7 p.m. Through five games this season, they have four shutouts and have outscored their opponents 255-6 this season. The six points allowed ties them with Olympic for the least allowed in the state
severing through three exhausting sets, but also winning his first singles match in his young career. “He will be interesting to watch in the coming years.” Soelter and Mehew won the No. 4 singles match 4-6, 6-4, 11-9.
Showing improvement The Roughriders were defeated by the Trojans 7-0 earlier in the season. “Once again, the scores do not reflect the improvement the fellows are enjoying this season,” Stockton said. “The guys keep working hard
and are improving every week. “Given the youth of this team, it will be fun to watch them in the coming years as they become more of a force in the Olympic League.” Olympic 5, Port Angeles 2 Singles No. 1: Ty Loan (O) def. Janson Pederson (PA) 6-2, 6-1. No. 2: Tyler Aerne (O) def. Kenny Soule (PA) 6-4, 1-6, 7-6. No. 3: Hayden Woods (PA) def. Cole Bender (O) 4-6, 6-3, 6-4. Doubles No. 1: Sangha/Pajimula (O) def. Kyler Mabrey/Tyler Nickerson (PA) 6-0, 6-1. No. 2: Walters/Dean (O) def. Devun Wahlsten/Wes Duncan (PA) 6-4, 6-1. No. 3: Peck/Borras (O) def. Dan Basen/Carson Jackson (PA) 6-1, 6-2. No. 4: Kale Mehew/Hudson Soelter (PA) def. Kelly/Tufts (O) 4-6, 6-4, 11-9.
TURN
TO
PREPS/B2
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ϰϭ DŽŶƚŚ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seattle safety Kam Chancellor (31) knocks the ball loose from Lions receiver Calvin Johnson near the end zone. never seen it come up and I’ve been coaching for — I don’t even know how many years it is and how many games it possibly could be. “I don’t see how anybody would have known that one. If they did, they did.” Had Wright been flagged, the Lions would have gotten possession back at the Seattle 1. Instead, things went Seattle’s way, but the noncall overshadowed the performance of the Seattle defense. For the second straight week, Seattle did not allow an offensive touchdown.
ALSO . . . ■ Seahawks hope Lynch can play Sunday/B3
The Lions were held to 256 total yards with 90 of those coming on Detroit’s final possession. The Seahawks have allowed one field goal in their opponents’ past 18 offensive possessions, including their Week 3 shutout of Chicago. Sixteen of those 18 possessions have ended in a punt TURN
TO
HAWKS/B3
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SportsRecreation
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015
Today’s
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SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY
Today Boys Tennis: Coupeville at Chimacum/Port Townsend, at Chimacum, 4 p.m.; Sequim at North Kitsap, 4 p.m. Cross Country: Sequim, Port Angeles at Port Townsend, 4 p.m. Men’s Soccer: Peninsula College at Skagit Valley, 4:15 p.m. Women’s Soccer: Peninsula College at Skagit Valley, 2 p.m.
Thursday Cross Country: Forks, Tenino, Eatonville at Elma, 4 p.m. Girls Soccer: Bremerton at Chimacum, 4 p.m.; Port Angeles at North Mason, 6:45 p.m.; Sequim at Olympic, 6:45 p.m. Girls Swimming: Port Townsend at Sequim, 3 p.m.; Port Angeles at Olympic, 3 p.m. Volleyball: Clallam Bay at Neah Bay, 5 p.m.; Forks at Montesano, 5:30 p.m.; Auburn Adventist at Quilcene, 6 p.m.; Sequim at Olympic, 6:15 p.m.; Cascade Christian at Chimacum, 6:15 p.m.; Port Angeles at North Mason, 6:15 p.m. Boys Tennis: North Mason at Port Angeles, 4 p.m.
Football Monday’s Game 0 3 0 7—10 0 10 3 0—13 Second Quarter Sea—Baldwin 24 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 10:56. Det—FG Prater 41, 5:16. Sea—FG Hauschka 51, 1:00. Third Quarter Sea—FG Hauschka 52, 11:11. Fourth Quarter Det—Reid 27 fumble return (Prater kick), 8:32. A—69,005. Det Sea First downs 12 18 Total Net Yards 256 345 Rushes-yards 18-53 31-110 Passing 203 235 Punt Returns 3-29 5-42 Kickoff Returns 2-54 3-46 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 24-35-0 20-26-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 6-52 Punts 8-45.9 4-48.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 4-3 Penalties-Yards 4-37 5-30 Time of Possession 27:56 32:04 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Detroit, Abdullah 13-33, Zenner 2-9, Tate 1-6, Riddick 1-5, Burton 1-0. Seattle, Rawls 17-48, Wilson 10-40, F.Jackson 3-21, Lockett 1-1. PASSING—Detroit, Stafford 24-35-0-203. Seattle, Wilson 20-26-0-287. RECEIVING—Detroit, Johnson 7-56, Riddick 5-31, Tate 3-29, Ebron 2-22, Moore 2-21, Abdullah 2-11, T.Wright 1-26, Zenner 1-4, Burton 1-3. Seattle, Lockett 4-58, Graham 4-29, Baldwin 3-36, Kearse 2-84, F.Jackson 2-33, Willson 2-15, Matthews 1-21, Daniels 1-12,
4 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Atlanta Hawks vs. Cleveland Cavaliers, Preseason (Live) 4 p.m. (311) ESPNU Volleyball NCAA, Texas vs. Baylor (Live) 5 p.m. (28) TBS Baseball MLB, Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh Pirates, National League Wild Card (Live) 5 p.m. (304) NBCSN Hockey NHL, New York Rangers at Chicago Blackhawks (Live) 6 p.m. (311) ESPNU Volleyball NCAA, Tennessee vs. Louisiana State (Live) 7 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Sacramento Kings vs. Phoenix Suns, Preseason (Live) 7 p.m. (47) GOLF PGA, Presidents Cup (Live) 7:30 p.m. (320) PAC12WA Volleyball NCAA, Arizona vs. Washington (Live) 7:30 p.m. (304) NBCSN Hockey NHL, San Jose Sharks at Los Angeles Kings (Live)
4 a.m. (47) GOLF EPGA, British Masters (Live)
GOLF
CHAMPS
The Cedars Dungeness Golf Shop team claimed the 2015 merchants league championship last month. The team is, from left, Barry Tuteur, Steve Lewis, Ray Ballantyne, Kris Lether, Richard Hansen and Russ Veenema. Not pictured are Lisa Ballantyne, Dan Wilder Jr. and Bill Benedict.
Seahawks 13, Lions 10 Detroit Seattle
Today
Thursday
Friday Football: Neah Bay at Tulalip Heritage, 6 p.m.; Crescent at Lummi, 6 p.m.; Port Townsend at Coupeville, 7 p.m.; Port Angeles at Black Hills (Tumwater), 7 p.m.; Sequim at North Mason, 7 p.m.; Klahowya at Chimacum, 7 p.m.; Elma at Forks, 7 p.m. Boys Tennis: Port Angeles at Sequim, 4 p.m. Girls Soccer: Forks at Eatonville, 3:30 p.m.
SPORTS ON TV
Rawls 1-(minus 1). MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
National Football League AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF New England 3 0 0 1.000 119 N.Y. Jets 3 1 0 .750 95 Buffalo 2 2 0 .500 110 Miami 1 3 0 .250 65 South W L T Pct PF Indianapolis 2 2 0 .500 72 Tennessee 1 2 0 .333 89 Houston 1 3 0 .250 77 Jacksonville 1 3 0 .250 62 North W L T Pct PF Cincinnati 4 0 0 1.000 121 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 .500 96 Baltimore 1 3 0 .250 93 Cleveland 1 3 0 .250 85 West W L T Pct PF Denver 4 0 0 1.000 97 Oakland 2 2 0 .500 97 San Diego 2 2 0 .500 96 Kansas City 1 3 0 .250 100 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Dallas 2 2 0 .500 95 N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 102 Washington 2 2 0 .500 78 Philadelphia 1 3 0 .250 78 South W L T Pct PF Carolina 4 0 0 1.000 108 Atlanta 4 0 0 1.000 137 Tampa Bay 1 3 0 .250 72
PA 70 55 92 101 PA 93 77 108 107 PA 77 75 104 102 PA 69 108 110 125 PA 101 82 79 86 PA 71 93 117
New Orleans 1 3 0 .250 North W L T Pct Green Bay 4 0 0 1.000 Minnesota 2 2 0 .500 Chicago 1 3 0 .250 Detroit 0 4 0 .000 West W L T Pct Arizona 3 1 0 .750 St. Louis 2 2 0 .500 Seattle 2 2 0 .500 San Francisco 1 3 0 .250
86
104
PF 113 80 68 66
PA 71 73 125 96
PF 148 74 87 48
PA 73 89 71 110
Thursday’s Game Baltimore 23, Pittsburgh 20, OT Sunday’s Games N.Y. Jets 27, Miami 14 Chicago 22, Oakland 20 Indianapolis 16, Jacksonville 13, OT N.Y. Giants 24, Buffalo 10 Carolina 37, Tampa Bay 23 Washington 23, Philadelphia 20 Atlanta 48, Houston 21 Cincinnati 36, Kansas City 21 San Diego 30, Cleveland 27 Green Bay 17, San Francisco 3 St. Louis 24, Arizona 22 Denver 23, Minnesota 20 New Orleans 26, Dallas 20, OT Open: New England, Tennessee Monday’s Game Seattle 13, Detroit 10 Thursday, Oct. 8 Indianapolis at Houston, 5:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 11 Chicago at Kansas City, 10 a.m. St. Louis at Green Bay, 10 a.m. Buffalo at Tennessee, 10 a.m. Seattle at Cincinnati, 10 a.m. Washington at Atlanta, 10 a.m.
Jacksonville at Tampa Bay, 10 a.m. New Orleans at Philadelphia, 10 a.m. Cleveland at Baltimore, 10 a.m. Arizona at Detroit, 1:05 p.m. Denver at Oakland, 1:25 p.m. New England at Dallas, 1:25 p.m. San Francisco at N.Y. Giants, 5:30 p.m. Open: Carolina, Miami, Minnesota, N.Y. Jets Monday, Oct. 12 Pittsburgh at San Diego, 5:30 p.m.
Baseball MLB Postseason WILD CARD Tuesday: Houston (Keuchel 20-8) at New York (Tanaka 12-7), late Today: Chicago (Arrieta 22-6) at Pittsburgh (Cole 19-8), 5:08 p.m. (TBS) DIVISION SERIES (Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Kansas City vs. New York-Houston winner Thursday: New York-Houston winner at Kansas City, 4:37 or 5:07 p.m. (FS1) Friday: New York-Houston winner at Kansas City, 12:45 p.m. (FS1) Sunday: Kansas City at New York-Houston winner, 1:10 p.m. (MLBN) x-Monday: Kansas City at New York-Houston winner, TBA (FOX or FS1) x-Wednesday, Oct. 14: New York-Houston winner at Kansas City, TBA (FOX or FS1) Toronto vs. Texas Thursday: Texas (Gallardo 13-11) at Toronto (Price 18-5), 12:37 or 1:07 p.m. (FS1) Friday: Texas (Hamels 7-1) at Toronto, 9:45 a.m. (MLBN) Sunday: Toronto at Texas, 5:10 p.m. (FS1)
x-Monday: Toronto at Texas (FOX or FS1) x-Wednesday, Oct. 14: Texas at Toronto (FOX or FS1) National League All games televised by TBS St. Louis vs. Pittsburgh-Chicago winner Friday: Pittsburgh-Chicago winner at St. Louis, 3:45 p.m. Saturday: Pittsburgh-Chicago winner at St. Louis, 2:37 p.m. Monday: St. Louis at Pittsburgh-Chicago winner x-Tuesday: St. Louis at Pittsburgh-Chicago winner x-Thursday, Oct. 15: Pittsburgh-Chicago winner at St. Louis Los Angeles vs. New York Friday: New York (deGrom 14-8) at Los Angeles, 6:45 p.m. Saturday: New York (Syndergaard 9-7) at Los Angeles, 6:07 p.m. Monday: Los Angeles at New York (Harvey 13-8) x-Tuesday: Los Angeles at New York x-Thursday, Oct. 15: New York at Los Angeles
Transactions BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Signed F Sampson Carter.
FOOTBALL National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS — Signed S Charles Godfrey and TE Tony Moeaki. Released TE Mickey Shuler. Placed WR Devin Hester on injured reserve-return. BUFFALO BILLS — Signed RB Dan Herron. Placed TE MarQueis Gray on injured reserve. Signed WR Walter Powell to the practice squad. CHICAGO BEARS — Placed C Will Montgomery on injured reserve. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed DL Ray Drew and DB Ty Zimmerman to the practice squad. Released DL Dylan Wynn and OL Garth Gerhart from the practice squad. GREEN BAY PACKERS — Signed DT Bruce Gaston to the practice squad.
Preps: Cowboys Scandal brewing in unchecked world of daily fantasy sports CONTINUED FROM B1 our offensive leaders.” Lillian Oden was 10 for 10 serving for Sequim and had a Volleyball team-high 10 assists. Sydney North Kitsap 3, Balken was 10 of 11 serving and Sequim 0 contributed five assists. The Wolves fell to 3-2 in league POULSBO — The Wolves dropped their second Olympic and 4-3 overall. League 2A match by falling to Chimacum 3, North Kitsap in three sets 25-12, 25-18, 25-17. Coupeville 2 “They pretty much overpowCOUPEVILLE — The Cowered us the first game with their boys bounced back from a 0-2 serving and hitting,” Sequim deficit to pick up their first Olymcoach Jennie Webber Heilman pic League 1A win. said of Thursday’s match. Chimacum won the final three “They served tough the whole sets Thursday despite being withmatch, and we struggled with out a pair of starters. serve-receive. Taylor Carthum was 94 per“We need to block better to cent serving with three aces for help our defense.” the Cowboys, and Ryley Eldridge Rylie Roberts had 13 perfect was 92 percent serving with four passes, 17 digs and six kills, all of aces. which were game-highs for the Carthum also led Chimacum Wolves. She also was 5 of 6 serv- with 18 assists. ing. Audrey Thacker contributed Megan Breckenridge had nine 10 kills and five blocks. Chelsey digs, three stuff blocks, five kills Johnson finished with four kills, and nine perfect passes. while Alina Preston had three. “Rylie was a leader on defense The Cowboys (1-0, 5-3) host and serve-receive,” Webber Heil- Cascade Christian for a nonman said. “Megan and Rylie were league match Thursday.
49ers trade for Vikings’ LB THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. — The Minnesota Vikings have traded linebacker Gerald Hodges to the San Francisco 49ers for rookie center Nick Easton and a sixthround draft pick. Vikings GM Rick Spielman announced the deal Tuesday.
Hodges, a backup outside linebacker in Minnesota’s 4-3 scheme his first two seasons, was the starter this season at middle linebacker in the base defense. Rookie Eric Kendricks replaced him in the nickel package, though. Kendricks has developed enough that the Vikings considered Hodges expendable.
BY JOE DRAPE AND JACQUELINE WILLIAMS THE NEW YORK TIMES
A major scandal is erupting in the multibillion dollar industry of fantasy sports, the online and unregulated business in which players assemble fantasy teams with real athletes. On Monday, the two major fantasy companies were forced to release statements defending their businesses’ integrity after what amounted to allegations of insider trading, that employees were placing bets on information not generally available to the public. The statements were released after an employee at the fantasy betting site DraftKings, one of the two major companies, last week admitted to inadvertently releasing data before the start of the third week of NFL games. The employee — a midlevel content manager — won $350,000 at a rival site, FanDuel, that same week. “It is absolutely akin to insider trading,” said Daniel Wallach, a sports and gambling lawyer at Becker & Poliakoff in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. “It gives that person a distinct edge in a contest.” The episode has raised questions about who at daily fantasy companies has access to valuable data, such as which players a majority of the money is being bet on; how it is protected; and whether the industry can — or wants — to police itself.
ESPN cuts sponsored elements THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LAS VEGAS — ESPN is cutting sponsored DraftKings elements from within its shows but not commercials from the daily fantasy sports site. That’s according to “ESPN Outside the Lines” host Bob Ley, who revealed the shift during his show Tuesday. The change comes as daily fantasy sports behemoths DraftKings and FanDuel respond to reports a DraftKings employee may have accessed valuable company
The industry has its roots in informal fantasy games that began years ago with groups of fans playing against each other for fun over the course of a season. They assembled hypothetical teams and scored points based on how players did in actual games. But in recent years, companies, led by DraftKings and FanDuel, have set up online daily and weekly games based on a similar concept in which fans pay an entry fee to a website — anywhere from 25 cents to $1,000 — to play dozens if not hundreds of opponents, with prize pools that can pay $2 million to the winner. On Monday, DraftKings and FanDuel released a joint state-
data before winning second place in a FanDuel contest, an incident likened to possible insider trading. The companies say there’s no evidence anyone misused internal data. ESPN says in a statement Tuesday’s change affected DraftKings billboards appearing during news shows, the clips saying a segment was “brought to you by” the company, calling the removal a standard procedure when “covering significant news, to avoid any suggestion of influence on our coverage.”
ment that said that “nothing is more important” than the “integrity of the games we offer,” but offered few specifics about how they keep their contests on the level. Industry analysts said the episode could leave the leagues open to further criticism that they are too loosely regulated. Already, there has been intensifying discussion on social media and among lawmakers over whether daily fantasy games are pushing the boundaries of an exemption in a 2006 federal law that has allowed them to operate. The games are legal in all but five states.
SportsRecreation
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015
B3
Patterson: Wilson’s protection must improve CONTINUED FROM B1 to dry. Not only was Wilson “I can’t even think of all sacked six times, he was the crazy scrambles he had the subject of another 10 QB hits. He must have to make,” Seattle coach Pete Carroll marveled after been flushed at least a dozen times, either taking the game. “It just changed so dras- the ball himself or throwtically from what it looked ing on the run. The Seahawks knew like was going to happen to what eventually happened. they were going with a makeshift offensive line “It was a remarkable this season. effort.” In order to sign the And it must have been a team’s stars, including Wilremarkable drain. Wilson son, to big-money contracts, was largely left on an Seattle had to scrimp in island Monday. other areas, and the offenHe received little help from the running game as, sive line was the one of those. in Marshawn Lynch’s Two of the five starters absence because of a hamhad never started an NFL string injury, replacement Thomas Rawls was held to game prior to this season. Part of the rationale for 48 yards on 17 carries. The offensive line, which choosing the offensive line couldn’t open any holes for as a budget unit was that Rawls, also left Wilson out Wilson, because of his
Bengals team Seattle plays on the road next week. “It’s not as good as we need it to be,” Carroll said of the offensive line play. “We didn’t run the ball as well as we wanted to tonight and obviously had trouble protecting. So we’ve Tied for most-sacked got to look at it. Wilson came into the “We’re still not as clean Week 4 having been sacked as we need to be. Six sacks, 12 times, which tied him that’s a lot of negative for the most in the NFL yards. We have to be better with Tennessee’s Marcus there, in all ways. Mariota, whose team had a “If it was one guy it bye. would be a different story. Wilson was brought It’s not that, we have down six more times by the issues we have to take care Lions on Monday, avoiding of.” the dubious distinction of There are those who being the most-sacked QB argue that Wilson is part of in the league all by himself the problem, holding onto only because the Cincinthe ball too long and allownati Bengals got to Kansas ing the pass rush time to City’s Alex Smith seven create pressure. times Sunday — the same He certainly didn’t help mobility, would be able to compensate for any deficiencies on the offensive line. But I doubt this is what the Seahawks brass had in mind.
his cause by fumbling twice while being sacked in the second half — Wilson acknowledged that “those are on me” following the game. The second of those fumbles was returned for a touchdown that made it 13-10, giving life to a Detroit team that was in the process of having the last rites read after having done nothing offensively all game long. But what is Wilson supposed to do when he constantly has pass rushers in his face immediately after dropping back three steps? “You watched Russell battle all night long,” Carroll said. “He was being sacked, he was scrambling, then he was completing passes.
“It was a crazy night of football. I can’t wait to see what that film looks like from his night because he had some phenomenal plays. “Then the ball got away from him a couple times, juts uncharacteristic things that happened to us.” The fumbles may have been uncharacteristic. The pressure on Wilson, unfortunately for the Seahawks, is not. And until the Seahawks get their offensive line issues sorted out, Wilson better keep those legs nice and limber. They’re going to get plenty of use.
________ The Daily Herald of Everett is a sister paper of the PDN. Sports columnist Nick Patterson can be reached at npatterson@heraldnet. com.
Hawks: Wacky north end zone Seahawks hopeful CONTINUED FROM B1 That defensive dominance of the past two weeks coincided with Kam Chancellor ending his holdout and returning to the team. It just seemed appropriate Chancellor would be the one making the game-saving play. “I just realized that I could get the ball out,” Chancellor said. “It just happened to be in a situation where I saved the game, but I saw a lot of brown of the ball, and I saw it loose, so I just punched at it. “We practiced that all the time.” This isn’t the first time one of Seattle’s stellar safeties has made a unique play at the goal line to force a turnover. In Week 17 last season against St. Louis, with Seattle trying to hold the lead in the fourth quarter, Earl Thomas chopped the
Lions coach done talking about controversial play THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ALLEN PARK, Mich. — Jim Caldwell doesn’t want to talk any more about the controversial way his Detroit Lions lost Monday night — and he doesn’t want his players talking about it either. Caldwell says he doesn’t want the Lions to be distracted by more discussion of Calvin Johnson’s fumble on Detroit’s final possession
arm of Rams running back Benny Cunningham as he stretched for the goal line. The ball came free and bounced into and out of the end zone for a Seattle touchback. Carroll said he’s shown
in a loss to Seattle. The ball was knocked out of the back of the end zone by the Seahawks’ K.J. Wright. Rather than flag him for illegally batting the ball, officials ruled the play a touchback. Caldwell said he spoke with NFL VP of Officiating Dean Blandino on Tuesday, but the Detroit coach would not go into detail about that conversation.
that play at least 50 times to his team to reiterate the point that every yard matters. “We’ve seen it before — Earl made the play last year against the Rams — and we understand that
somebody is going to make a play,” Seattle linebacker Bobby Wagner said. “The saying is, ‘Give us an inch of grass.’ That’s all it is. We’ll make the play.” The north end zone of CenturyLink Field has seen its share of wackiness. Wright guiding the ball out of bounds for a touchback just adds to a history that includes the “Fail Mary,” Tony Romo’s dropped field-goal snap in the closing minutes of a playoff game in January 2007 and Terrell Owens pulling a pen from his sock and autographing a football on a Monday night against the Seahawks in 2002. All four of those moments happened in prime time — three on Monday nights — leading Carroll to crack that’s where fans should sit if they’re coming to a Monday game in Seattle. “That little corner, there’s some crazy stuff on Monday night,” Carroll said.
Finding a center fielder takes center stage for new Mariners GM Dipoto JERRY DIPOTO’S FIRST significant roster move as Seattle Mariners general manager will be acquiring a center fielder. This is just a hunch. When John Dipoto was introduced last week, he McGrath spoke in vague tones appropriate for the occasion. But more than once he mentioned his desire to put together a team better equipped for Safeco Field than the 2015 Mariners, who finished with the second-worst home record in the American League. Customizing a roster capable of taking advantage of Seattle’s spacious outfield begins in center, which used to be the least of the Mariners’ concerns.
A fan can get spoiled watching the likes of Griffey and Cameron turn line-drive doubles into outs. I know I did. So the new general manager might want to identify a right fielder and, while he’s at it, a left fielder, in addition to a first baseman and a catcher. But the essential component in the makeover is the center fielder. “There’s a lot of ways you can put it together,” Dipoto said. “You’ve got to understand, first and foremost, that the ballpark affords you an ability to build a pitching staff and create a defensive model that other parks just don’t have.”
Dipoto must deal The bad news for the Mariners is that the center fielders available as 2016 free agents present no tangible upgrade over Miller. They will merely be more expensive, and less amenable to hitting here and there in the batting order. The good news? Dipoto regards free agents as a last resort — complimentary pieces, as he put it, to “augment” a roster. He’d rather participate in the kind of trade Zduriencik pulled off to acquire Gutierrez. As a baseball historian, Dipoto likely is familiar with defensive positions Abbott and Costello referred to in their skit “Who’s On First?” The name of Abbott and Costello’s center fielder is “Because.” Which brings us back to the question: Why does Dipoto’s quest to reconfigure the Mariners into a team suited for their ballpark begin with the center fielder? A fast and skilled player in center can compensate for athletes with less range in the corners. A fast and skilled player in center field is the baseball equivalent of a point guard on a basketball floor, and a quarterback on a football field. Acquiring a fast and skilled center fielder will be paramount for Jerry Dipoto. Because.
________ John McGrath is a sports columnist for The News Tribune. He can be contacted at john. mcgrath@thenewstribune.com.
away from returning. The Seahawks had three players leave Monday’s game with injuries and not return. Cornerback Marcus Burley suffered a broken thumb, receiver Ricardo Lockette had shortness of breath, and running back Fred Jackson sprained his ankle. Carroll said he hadn’t received a report on any of those players by the time his radio show aired, but he thought Lockette should be fine and said Jackson was walking around “pretty good” after the game.
BY NICK PATTERSON THE [EVERETT] DAILY HERALD
The most significant piece of injury news to come out of Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll’s radio show Tuesday was that he is hopeful that No. 1 running back Marshawn Lynch, who missed just his second game in six seasons with the Seahawks because of a hamstring injury, will recover in time to play Sunday when Seattle travels to Cincinnati. Lynch went through some exercises on the field prior to Monday’s game, suggesting he’s not far
Future of three teams on agenda as owners meet BY BARRY WILNER
NFL
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — NFL owners will look west (Los Angeles), east (Europe) and south (Mexico) at their fall meetings today. The owners will further consider the desire of three franchises — the St. Louis Rams, Oakland Raiders and San Diego Chargers — to move to Los Angeles. Nothing will be decided at these meetings. There will be updates from the three teams, and representatives of those three cities will brief the 32 owners on any progress — or lack thereof — on stadiums in their regions. Potential relocation fees if the league approves a move at some point also could be discussed today.
So might temporary sites for those clubs in Los Angeles, where the Rams hope to build a state-of-theart stadium in Inglewood. The Chargers and Raiders are combining on a planned project for Carson, Calif. No decisions on an actual move to Los Angeles can come before early 2016. However, at the owners’ December meetings in Dallas, it’s highly possible the NFL will open the window for relocation applications, letting any of the three teams formally apply. The NFL has not had teams in Los Angeles since the Rams and Raiders both moved in 1995.
Snyder: Depth CONTINUED FROM B1 have been added to the roster recently, including lineman Cody So far it hasn’t been senior tested, since the Redhawks’ McClain, sophomore runclosest game, as far as final ning back/linebacker Jacob score is concerned, was Boucher and senior twins their 44-0 win over Bel- Austin and Matthew Widmer, who Snyder said are levue Christian last month. both running back/receiver Port Townsend also has types who have been helpremained healthy so far. ing out on special teams. Snyder said that most of For these players, the damage at this point is though, Snyder said, “It “bumps and bruises.” takes a little bit to get into And a few more players shape.”
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spring training. Sure enough, he lost it. James Jones and Endy Chavez were used as stopgaps until Austin Jackson was acquired from the Tigers. Jackson is a terrific all-around athlete — he once was recruited to play basketball at Georgia Tech — who seemed to provide the Mariners with at least a short-term solution in center. That was the plan, anyway. In reality, he became part of a musical-chairs brigade of 2015 center fielders that has included, let’s see: Jones, Dustin Ackley, Ketel Marte, Shawn O’Malley, Stefen Romero, Justin Ruggiano and Brad Miller. In other words, it has been a mess. Nobody expects the Mariners to Famine followed feast obtain the next Ken Griffey Jr. — a Between 1989 and 1999, future franchise gets somebody like that Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr. played every half-century or so — but it’s the position with grace and flair. not unreasonable to believe there’s a Then Griffey was replaced by durable version of Gutierrez out Mike Cameron, a technically superior there: a center fielder who can cover fielder who earned a pair of Gold ground on defense and supply some Gloves between 2000 and 2003. He energy on offense. should have won four. A fan can get spoiled watching the ‘Keep lineup moving’ likes of Griffey and Cameron turn “We need to find a mix of the athline-drive doubles into outs. I know I letic and the tried and true,” Dipoto did. After Cameron departed as a free said last week. “We need to find guys who can agent, the opening day center fielder in 2004 was Randy Winn, whose arm keep a lineup moving. Sometimes turned out to be weaker than chicken you can keep a lineup moving with two guys — one in the upper third soup served on a hospital tray. Winn gave way to Jeremy Reed, a and one in the bottom third — creating a flow. minor league hot shot who copped “And you might be able to find a the attitude of a major league hot shot, necessitating the first and most center fielder who can cover twosuccessful trade of the Jack Zdurien- thirds of the outfield. If you do that, you can afford some bop on one corcik era: a three-team deal that ner.” brought Franklin Gutierrez to the Speaking of corner bop: Nelson Mariners. Cruz in right field hasn’t been the In a perfect world Gutierrez — train wreck some feared. aka “Death to Flying Things” — But he’s 35, and though his totalremains the center fielder for a player commitment is sincere, there’s decade. You know how that turned a spot in any AL lineup card for a out. 35-year old slugger with marginal Last season, manager Lloyd McClendon decided center field was defensive skills. That spot is as desigAbraham Almonte’s job to lose out of nated hitter.
Marshawn Lynch can play Sunday
B4
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015
Dilbert
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Classic Doonesbury (1985)
Frank & Ernest
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Stepson, sis too close for comfort
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
Garfield
Fun ’n’ Advice
DEAR ABBY: I am happily married to a great man. I have a young daughter from a previous marriage, and my husband has two teenagers, a boy and girl, from a prior marriage. Like many blended families, we have our struggles, but one is becoming increasingly difficult to deal with. I don’t know how to put this tastefully, but I’ll state it this way: My stepchildren are “too close,” if you know what I mean. They flirt, constantly touch each other and playfully tease each other. (A few people have even mistaken them for a couple.) My husband doesn’t seem to notice this unhealthy behavior. How can I get through to my husband or deal with this? Repulsed in Pennsylvania
by Lynn Johnston
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by G.B. Trudeau
DEAR ABBY the house, including keeping her Van Buren room clean. After two weeks, she and her boyfriend got back together, and she was spending every night with him at his parents’ house. She would return to our home to eat, wash clothes, shower and use the Internet. I finally had to tell her this was not acceptable and that she needed to decide to either live here or move in with her boyfriend. She moved out. Now, it is uncomfortable when she comes around. I don’t feel I did anything wrong, but my daughter thinks I shouldn’t have made a big deal out of her sleeping at her boyfriend’s house and using our house as a place to park her stuff, eat and wash her clothes. What do you think? No Time for Freeloaders
Abigail
Dear Repulsed: Was the relationship between your husband’s children making you uncomfortable before you married their father? If so, did you bring it to his attention at that time? Family relationships can vary, and because I haven’t witnessed what you have observed, I can’t advise you other than to suggest that family counseling might be in order to determine whether the kids have a normal sibling relationship or if it has gone over the line.
by Bob and Tom Thaves
Dear No Time: You were generous to be as supportive as you were of your daughter’s former roommate. This has nothing to do with her sleeping at her boyfriend’s. You asked only that she behave like an adult and contribute by paying for her food and keeping her room clean. She didn’t keep her part of the bargain. You shouldn’t feel uncomfortable; she should, for not behaving responsibly.
Dear Abby: Last spring, we helped our daughter’s longtime friend move out of the college dorm room she shared with our daughter. Her parents are divorced and weren’t available to help her move or give us money to help her, and she had just broken up with her boyfriend. We rented a van and offered to let her stay at our home as long as she helped pay for groceries and got a job. She got the job but never helped pay for food or did anything around
by Jim Davis
________ Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
The Last Word in Astrology ❘
Red and Rover
Rose is Rose
❘
❘
ARIES (March 21-April 19): You will attract attention and stir up plenty of action. Let your imagination run wild and delve into creative projects. Show off your skills and make a point to stand out in a crowd. Live, love and laugh. 5 stars
by Brian Basset
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t leave anything unfinished if you want to avoid criticism. Once you have taken care of your responsibilities, you will feel free to do something that is new and exciting. Someone unique will inspire you to incorporate change into your everyday routine. 2 stars
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Make personal changes. A pick-me-up will get you pumped up and eager to get your plans underway. Don’t let anyone talk you into a costly venture. Figure out a way to stick to your budget and get what you want. 4 stars
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Living in the past and daydreaming will be comforting, but hardly helpful. You’ll be faced with criticism and complaints if you don’t start moving forward and living life. Family and friends will leave you behind if you don’t keep up. 3 stars
Dennis the Menace
❘
by Hank Ketcham
Pickles
❘
by Brian Crane
by Eugenia Last
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Put dramatic tendencies in the closet. You are best to do what you say and bring about the changes you’ve been contemplating and procrastinating about. You have everything to gain and nothing to lose. Romance will improve your love life. 3 stars
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You’ll be the center of attention. Your playful, free-spirited attitude will draw followers, but also skeptics. Make sure that whatever promises you make are ones you intend to honor. Your flirtatious ways will get you into trouble if you aren’t careful. 5 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Keep demanding individuals at a distance. Get your priorities straight and your responsibilities taken care of so you can get on with your day without feeling guilty. A lastminute social invite will lead to an interesting liaison. 3 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Someone will hold you to a promise or question what you say. Be hopeful and be prepared to share your strategy with facts and figures to back you up. Don’t be afraid of being different. Make your uniqueness your platform. 3 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Being a participant will show others what you are capable of doing. A change in the way you are treated and the offers people make will lead to greater prosperity. Romance is in the stars, and celebrating with someone you love is encouraged. 4 stars
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Chat with people about your plans and how you intend to move forward. Love and romance are in the stars and can help you reach your personal goals. The future looks safe, secure and inviting. 3 stars
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Concentrate on getting ahead, not getting angry. It’s up to you to put forth your best effort and let the results you get speak for you. Follow the path that excites you the most, not the one everyone else is taking. 2 stars
The Family Circus
❘
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accomplishment will require deep concentration and an understanding of what it will take to turn your desires into a reality. Don’t be fooled by what others are saying. Stand by your own principles and do what suits you best. 3 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Wednesday, October 7, 2015 PAGE
B5
Senate panel is probing VW’s use of tax credits
Shred event set in Sequim on Oct. 17
Real-time stock quotations at peninsuladailynews.com
Market watch Oct. 6, 2015
Notice is given as carmaker’s hearing nears BY MATTHEW DALY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The Senate Finance Committee opened a probe Tuesday into Volkswagen’s use of a federal tax credit intended for fuelefficient cars as the company’s emissions-rigging scandal widened. Sens. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Ron Wyden, D-Ore. said in a letter to Volkswagen that more than $50 million in tax subsidies might have gone to VW owners under false pretenses. Hatch chairs the Finance panel and Wyden is its senior Democrat. Volkswagen’s use of “defeat devices” in diesel passenger cars raises the question of whether the automaker “made false representations to the U.S. government” in certifying that the VW Jetta and other models met emissions standards needed to claim the $1,300-per-veheicle tax credit, the senators said. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the letter, which was sent to VW late Tuesday. The vehicles in which Volkswagen installed the defeat devices “included those that the company certified as qualifying for the advanced lean-burn technology motor vehicle credit,” Hatch and Wyden said. The letter asks the company to respond by Oct. 30. The Senate Finance probe comes as the House and Energy Committee has scheduled a hearing Thursday on the emission-rigging scandal. The hearing is the first since VW admitted that it installed defeat devices in nearly 500,000 diesel vehicles in the U.S. that emitted far more exhaust pollution than was legal.
$ Briefly . . .
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
People leave a Volkswagen car factory in Wolfsburg, Germany, last month. The German automaker has confirmed that it installed the devices on as many as 11 million vehicles worldwide from model years 2009 through 2015.
CEO to testify Michael Horn, president and CEO of Volkswagen Group of America, is scheduled to testify at Thursday’s hearing before the Energy and Commerce panel’s subcommittee on oversight and investigations. The Environmental Protection Agency said last month that VW used sophisticated software that allowed its cars to pass federally mandated emissions tests in the lab and then spew pollution into the atmosphere while on the highway. A VW spokeswoman could not be
immediately reached for comment Tuesday. The company could face penalties of up to $18 billion from the EPA, although any fine isn’t expected to be the full amount. The automaker said it has set aside more than $7 billion to pay fines, recall costs and legal settlements. There are also signs the company is moving to strengthen its lobbying presence in Washington. Congress created the alternative motor vehicle credit in 2005 to encourage use of fuel efficient vehicles. The credit included the advanced lean-burn technology motor vehicle credit, which was available to buyers of qualifying vehicles that were certified by manufacturers as meeting certain emissions standards.
SEQUIM — First Fed13.76 Dow Jones eral will partner with the industrials 16,790.19 Sequim Food Bank for the semiannual “First Fed -32.90 Nasdaq Shred” event at Sequim composite 4,748.36 High School, 601 N. -7.13 Standard & Sequim Ave., from 10 a.m. Poor’s 500 to 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 17. 1,979.92 This is an opportunity Russell -7.95 for people to safely dispose 2000 1,133.69 of personal documents. There is no cost for the NYSE diary Advanced: document shredding; 1,726 instead, event sponsors Declined: 1,398 urge each person who Unchanged: 101 brings documents to bring Volume: 4.1 b a donation of food — especially peanut butter, tuna, Nasdaq diary canned soup, pasta and rice Advanced: 1,226 — or a cash contribution Declined: 1,548 for the Sequim Food Bank. Unchanged: 176 For more information, Volume: 1.9 b visit www.sequimfood AP bank.org or phone the food bank at 360-683-1205. — Female workers in California will get new tools to Septic system info challenge gender-based wage gaps under legislation CHIMACUM — Chisigned into law Tuesday macum and Port Ludlow residents are invited to an that supporters said offers open house with informa- the strongest equal-pay protection in the nation. tion on free and low-cost The bill expands Caliprograms to repair home on-site septic systems and fornia’s existing equal pay law and goes further than updates on water quality federal law by placing the in the Chimacum and burden on the employer to Ludlow Creek basins. prove a man’s higher pay The event takes place is based on factors other at the Tri-Area Commuthan gender. nity Center, 10 W. Valley Road, from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 26. Gold and silver For more information, Gold for December phone 360-379-4482. rose $8.80, or 0.8 percent, The open house is to settle at $1,146.40 an hosted by Jefferson ounce Tuesday. County Public Health and December silver the Jefferson County Con- gained 32.7 cents, or servation District. 2.1 percent, to end at $16.045 an ounce. Wage equality Peninsula Daily News SACRAMENTO, Calif. and The Associated Press
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Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B. Carpentry-Green Building Instructor Peninsula College is recruiting for an Instructor of Carpentry and Green Building at Olympic Corrections Center. Position information and on-line application for m available at www.pencol.edu. EEO
WHY PAY SHIPPING ON INTERNET PURCHASES? SHOP LOCAL peninsula dailynews.com
ADOPTION: College Professor & At-HomeParent, Music, World Travel, Laughter, LOVE awaits your baby. Expenses paid 1-800-933-1975 Patti & Andrew Male, 70, non smoker, seek female friend 65-70 (Christian or wanabe) (360)797-1536
CASE NAVIGATOR / COORDINATOR TEMPORARY FULL TIME Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe is seeking a Case Navigator Coordinator to provide advocacy and coordination of social and behavioral health services for children and families. This temporary grant funded position requires a BA and 2 years of Human Service experience (optional AA with additional related experience or HS diploma with exceptional experience). Knowledge and understanding of local and Tribal government desired. This grant funded position runs through September 2018. Typically Mon. - Fri. with one evening a week and occasional Saturdays. Indian preference for qualified candidates. Please visit http://jamestowntribe.iapplicants.com for full description and to apply.
Single male, retired, 72, 5’6”, 185 lbs, non smoke r. S e e k i n g fe m a l e friend, 60-68, Port Ang e l e s / Po r t To w n s e n d Area. (360)582-7970
3020 Found FOUND: Cash, 10-1, W. Cedar St near 3rd Ave. Contact Sequim Police Dept. (360)683-7227. F O U N D: C a t , fe m a l e. Tabby, with white accent. Above the college. (504)230-8779
3023 Lost
ACCEPTING APPLICAT I O N S fo r C A R R I E R ROUTE Por t Angeles Area. Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Interested parties must be 18 yrs of age, have valid Washington State Driver’s License, proof of insurance, and reliable vehicle. Early morning delivery Monday-Friday and Sunday. Apply in person 305 W 1st St, or send resume to tsipe@peninsuladailynews.com. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. ALGAE TECHNICIANS Entry level. Full time. Multiple entry level algae technician positions open immediatel y. N o e x p e r i e n c e required, pay is based on experience/education. Algae Tech position consists of light labor, sample collection, data entry, tank cleani n g , e t c . M u s t wo r k well as a team as well as independently. Apply in person at 1601 Linger Longer Rd. Quilcene or email inquires/resumes to skilmer@coast seafoods.com
LOST: Dog. Golden Ret. mix, old, 80 lbs. Palo Alto Rd, Sequim. Has Collar with tags, IT Service Technician chipped. (360)681-4450. Experienced, customer service skills a must, A+ L O S T: Ke y s , o r a n g e certification and network flashlight on ring. Cedar experience a plus. Send a n d 8 t h S t . o n 9 / 3 0 . resume to (360)460-7488 management @poeinc.com LOST: Maroon tote bag with wallet. Clallam LOG TRUCK DRIVER C o u n t y Fa i r g r o u n d s . Experienced 10/1. (360)912-5593 (360)460-9920
DAYS INN: Night Auditor. Exper ienced preferred. Apply in person at Days Inn, 1510 E. Front St., Port Angeles. No phone calls.
B L U E M O U N TA I N ANIMAL CLINIC IS HIRING. POSITION REQUIRES: LVT or releva n t ex p e r i e n c e i n clinical veter inar y practice. YOU ARE: Careful, compassiona t e & r e l i a bl e w i t h dog/cat handling in a veter inar y setting. Te a m w o r k e r , D e pendable, Available for evening and on-call wor k. Motivated to work in a professional, fun, empowered environment Available immediately. TO APPLY:Resumes via EMAIL ONLY NO PHONE CALL OR DROP INS email resume to: bmac2972@gmail.co m CAREGIVERS NEEDED $100 hire on bonus, $11.88 hr., benefits. No experience. Free training. Caregivers Home Care. 457-1644, 6837377, 379-6659 MEDICAL ASSISTANT Seeking full time medical assistant, certified or WA state registered eligible. Benefits. Exp. preferred. Send resume to 1112 Caroline St., Por t Angeles, WA 98362
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CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM GRANT PROJECT MANAGER TEMPORARY PART-TIME Great oppor tunity to manage communitybased needs assessment and oversee “Systems of Care” model of social service delivery for Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe. This temporary grant funded position req u i r e s a M a s t e r ’s o r bachelor’s degree (in social work, psychology or related field) with equivalent experience and a minimum of 1 year project management experience with supervisory responsibilities as well as community organization and development, p a r t i c u l a r l y i n N a t i ve communities. This grant funded position runs through September 2 0 1 8 . M - F. , 2 0 h o u r s week, negotiable schedule. Indian preference for qualified candidates. Please visit http://jamestowntribe.iapplicants .com for full description and to apply.
DEADLINES: Noon the weekday before publication. ADDRESS/HOURS: 305 West First Street/P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays CORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS: Corrections--the newspaper accepts responsibility for errors only on the first day of publication. Please read your ad carefully and report any errors promptly. Cancellations--Please keep your cancellation number. Billing adjustments cannot be made without it.
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3010 Announcements 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Classified
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis B6 Wednesday, October 7, 2015
DOWN 1 Ravi’s musical daughter
By DaviD Ouellet HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizontally, vertically, diagonally and even backward. Find them, circle each letter of the word and strike it off the list. The leftover letters spell the WONDERWORD. DESSERT RECIPES Solution: 7 letters
C H O C O L A T E X T R A C T 2 Disco era suffix 3 Mean 4 Wing alternative 5 Flatly denied it 6 Hit __: experience delays 7 Put out on the infield 8 One at the front? 9 Butter serving 10 “Meet the Parents” actor 11 Contents of some envs. 12 Neb. neighbor 13 “Do as __ ...” 18 __-Ashbury: San Francisco section 22 Court official 24 Smidgen of spice 25 Take the top medal 26 By surprise 27 New Age musician John 30 Compete in a heat 31 At any time 32 “Nothing to it!” 33 Siesta hrs. 34 Charging cable, e.g.
Pioneer Propane is looking for a person with a CDL-B with Haz. mat. license. Duties will range from delivery of propane, service work, sales and building maint. No lifting restriction a must. Prior propane experience prePA I N T E R : M u s t h ave ferred but not necessary. experience, transporta- ( 3 6 0 ) 6 8 3 - 9 9 8 8 . 9 3 1 tion. Tim (360)477-3008. Carlsborg Rd. Sequim, WA
E Z T Y A A K E R T N U T S A ◯ ◯ ◯ ◯ S R A B E W P R V U E I O B D E E C I E T S E S O P N D W P T A D S N L E R N S R E A T K X M I I Y O N E G G G S A L T
D I N T E I P A I O O L A S R
H M T R N G T C R O L L S Y E
T E G W N U Y F C R O I L S G
R N O I L K I D S A F I L L N
I R K A S P O O N C M I L K I
B A K I N G S O D A D D I N G
B I S C O T T I F M C O C O A
10/7
Adding, Baking Powder, Baking Soda, Bars, Birthday, Biscotti, Brownies, Butter, Cake, Candy, Chocolate, Cinnamon, Cocoa, Cookies, Crisp, Decorate, Eggs, Extract, Family, Fill, Frosting, Ginger, Ingredients, Kids, Macaroons, Milk, Mixer, Mousse, Muffins, Nuts, Oils, Oven, Party, Pies, Rolls, Salt, Spatula, Spoon, Sweet, Tart, Time, Truffles, Zest Yesterday’s answer: Patchwork
Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
VICLI ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
GINIC ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
10/7/15
51 Chance to swing 52 Three-ingredient treat 53 Common dinner hr. 54 Nabisco cracker 55 Concert reed 56 About 500 pounds of cotton 60 Scholar’s deg. 61 Want-ad abbr. 62 Quick drink 63 Aye or hai
35 Not fer 36 Graphic novel artist 39 Isle of Mull neighbor 40 Land 41 Tide type 46 Classic Fords 47 Accelerator particle 48 Mournful tolls 50 Physical likeness
NOPELL
LURPEY
Title office needs a motivated, team oriented indiv. Be prof in MS & comps. Tit l e / e s c r ow ex p a + . Hiring for LT w/ growth opps. Psn is 35 hrs a wk to star t. landtitle@olypen.com, 402 S. Lincoln St. PA
Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experie n c e n e c e s s a r y, $ 1 0 . 5 0 h r. A p p l y i n person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m.
Peninsula Classified 360-452-8435
$5000 SIGN ON BONUS
Now Hiring: Licensed Nurses
Must have a valid WA RN or LPN Certification. Sign on bonus for those with a minimum of 1 year experience.
We are offering
SIGN ON BONUS OF $5000! ACT FAST!
Excellent Medical, Dental, Vision & 401K benefits offered.
Interested candidates can apply online at
www.crestwoodskillednursing.com 591423770
1116 East Lauridsen Blvd. • Port Angeles, WA 98362 Phone: 360.452.9206 EOE
Correctional Officer 1 Permanent & On-Call positions available now at Clallam Bay & Olympic Corrections Center. Pay s t a r t s a t $ 3 , 1 2 0 monthly, Plus full benefits. Closes 10/18/2015 Apply on-line: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
A: Yesterday’s
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General General General General FLOORING INSTALLER: Contractor looking for installer and helpers. Experience helpful. (360)531-3640
S C I V A N I M O U S S E I N
© 2015 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download our app!
10/7/15
By Howard Barkin
T R U F F L E S S N I F F U M
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
ACROSS 1 Great Salt Lake component, to a chemist 5 Moved for a better view, in a way 10 Lucy’s partner 14 Fairy tale villain 15 Yoga position 16 Pair in a loaf 17 Sleeping in the great outdoors, e.g. 19 Big East or Big South org. 20 Generation 21 Org. recommending flossing 22 Like many stunts 23 Making sense 28 In the past 29 Start of a spelling rule broken by deists? 33 Flooded 36 Bring __ a substitute 37 Co-star of Burt in “The Killers” 38 Fair odds 42 Prefix with fold 43 “I get the idea!” 44 Skeptical 45 Guard 48 Korean automaker 49 Airport agent’s request 54 Adolescent sidekick 57 Indifferent response 58 “I did not need to know that” 59 Letter-shaped building part 60 Hockey punishment for the starts of the longest across answers 64 Narrated 65 “State of Affairs” star Katherine 66 Clanton foe 67 Jazz finale? 68 Schmoes 69 Leaf support
Peninsula Daily News
Family Health Home Visitor Full Time - $33,168 Annually, Full Benefit Package including, Retirement and Medical. To apply go to: www.oesd.wednet.edu DISPATCHER: Full time 360-479-0993 needed for prominent loOEO & ADA cal family owned HVAC Company. Strong comSan Juan Villa puter & time management skills, ability to MemoryCare is hiring Housekeeper w o r k i n d e p e n d e n t l y, Dietary Aide multi phone lines, multiCook tasking and customer reCaregiver lations with a friendly disposition is a must. If you possess the comWage DOE. Please sub- passion, desire and mamit cover letter & re- turity to work in a des u m e t o j o b @ a l l we a - mentia community, this therhc.com No phone could be for you. Our homelike atmosphere calls or drop in’s please. helps residents have the best possible quality of life. We are offering a variety of shifts: part or full time. We encourage applicants with experiStationary Engineer 2 ence but will also proFull Time- Per manent vide Home Care Aide positions available now t ra i n i n g t o q u a l i f y i n g at Clallam Bay & Olym- candidates. If you have pic Corrections Center. a love and compassion Pay s t a r t s a t $ 3 , 9 8 2 for our elders, have high Monthly, Plus full bene- standards, and are willing to learn, please call fits.Closes 10/11/2015 us or come in for an apApply on-line: plication and interview. www.careers.wa.gov. (360) 344-3114. 112 For further information Castellano Way in Port please call Cynthia Townsend, WA. at (360)963-3207 EOE
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: DODGE BRAVE AROUND INTACT Answer: The rock group was so bad that the audience left. They were — “A-BAND-DONE”
4026 Employment 4080 Employment 4080 Employment General Wanted Wanted Early Childhood Services Olympic Community Action Early Childhood Services is hiring for the following positions (Clallam and Jefferson C o u n t y ) : E a r ly H e a d Start Home Visitor, 40 Hours per week, with Benefits; Itinerant Teacher Assistant, 40 Hours per Week, with Benefits; Child Development Substitutes, Hours Var y. Applications available at OlyCAP; 823 Commerce Loop, Por t Townsend, WA (360) 385-2571; 228 W First Street, Port Angeles, WA (360) 4524 7 2 6 ; a n d w w w. o l y cap.org. Closes when filled. EOE
S E V E N C E DA R S I S HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS • C u s t o m e r S e r v i c e Officer FT Swing Shift • Deli/Espresso Cashier/Attendant • Gift Shop Cashier (On Call) • IT Manager • Line Cook PT Napolis • Porter PT • Snack Bar Attendant • Totem Rewards Casino Ambassador • Wine Bar Server Fo r m o r e i n fo r m a t i o n and to apply online, please visit our website at www.7cedars resort.com. Native American preference for qualified candidates.
Accepting new clients. Loving, caring, energetic women looking to c a r e f o r e l d e r l y, disabled, and/or home bound clients. Can do shopping, errands, cooking and cleaning, transpor tation to appointments and most anything that is needed. Flexible schedules. Full or Par t time ava i l a bl e. C e r t i f i e d . Call or leave message at 360/460-5276 Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B.
Housekeeping, caregiving, waitressing, nanny. references upon request. (360)912-4002 or jotterstetter44 @gmail.com
Licensed Nurse Assit a n t / C N A . Av a i l . f o r nights and occasional days, for elder ly or young women. Refs. avail., experienced. (360)683-7817
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County
FALL YARD CLEAN UP Tr i m m i n g , w e e d i n g , hauling, pruning, mowing. Reasonable rates. (360)683-7702
Commercial Making a Come Back! Great oppor tunity for purchasing prime commercial property. 2 contiguous vacant lots bordering very busy Race St. - one of the main thoroughfares in Por t Angeles, traveled by locals & tourists for year r o u n d ex p o s u r e. T h i s property is in an excellent central location. This property has many permitted uses – call us for more information! MLS#280558 $195,000 Team Thomsen UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979
Young Couple Early 60’s available for seasonal cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching & moss removal. We specialize in complete garden restorations. Excellent references. 457-1213 Chip & Sunny’s Garden Tr a n s f o r m a t i o n s . L i c e n s e # C C CHIPSSG850LB.
Commercial 3316 S/F building located in the uptown business district. Currently the building is configured as 6 separate office units plus a meeting hall. MLS#291847 $250,000 Tom Blore 360-683-7814 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE
A Plus Lawn Ser vice. Hedge, shrub trimming, thatching, many references, professional results. Here today here tomorrow. Senior Discounts. P A only. Local call (360) 808-2146
FREE C.N.A. CLASSES
Become a certified NursiNg assistaNt!
ONLY 2 POSITIONS LEFT!
Crestwood & Sequim Health and Rehabilitation will be holding in-house CNA Classes beginning October 21, 2015 and spaces are running out!!! If you are interested please visit us online at
NOW HIRING:
CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANTS! ALSO HIRING NEW GRADUATES
www.crestwoodskillednursing.com or www.sequimskillednursing.com or call for more information.
5A1426842
1116 East Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles
360.452.9206
360.582.2400
www.crestwoodskillednursing.com www.sequimskillednursing.com
We are located at: 1116 East Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles, WA 98362
360.452.9206
591423767
For more information please visit us online at:
650 West Hemlock St., Sequim
Excellent Medical, Dental, Vision & 401k benefits offered. Also offering Refer a Friend bonus! Interested candidates can apply online at www.crestwoodskillednursing.com
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses 1163 Commercial Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Rentals
Contemporary Pacific NW Home This Chic 3 Br / 2.5 ba is meticulously kept and offers lovely views of Olympic Mtns, Straits of Juan De Fuca and Happy Va l l ey Fa r m l a n d s. Great room, formal dining, kitchen with granite counters and eating area, office / den, large master suite with fireplace and entry to hot tub deck, 2 additional guest bedrooms and expansive view deck for e n t e r t a i n i n g . MLS#291304 $597,000 Deborah Norman Brokers Group Real Estate Professionals (360)460.9961
PRICE Improvement!!!! Spectacular water views, 125 ft of bluff frontage. At the end of a county road 5 minutes to town. Over 2200 sq ft with 3 bds, 3 baths, 3 car gar. all on a wooded 1.4 acres. MLS#290630 $425,000 Dave Ramey UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2800 Prime Prime location for your bu s i n e s s h e r e. G r e a t visibility from main drag (Washington) and hwy 101. Level lot and easy to build on. All utilities in and ready to go. Terrific spot for new business. MLS#262081 $100,000 Shawnna Rigg (360)683-1500 RE/MAX Reduced to sell! With acceptable offer sellers will give buyers a $10,000 allowance to cut or top trees of their choice. Don’t miss out on this opportunity. Imagine building your dream home here on bell hill. This nice wide acre lot with beautiful views abound could be the perfect spot. Bring your “blue prints” and check it out. MLS#290976 $139,000 Shawnna Rigg (360)683-1500 RE/MAX
BEAVER: Manufactured Homes for Sales. 3 Homes for sale at Lake Pleasant Mobile Home and RV Park in Beaver. Offering newer 3, 2 and 1 b r. M a nu fa c t u r e d homes available with recent upgrades. All in excellent condition and move in ready. Prices range from $29,950 to $46,950. Financing available OAC Call (360) 808-7120. Homes cannot be moved.
605 Apartments Clallam County
6025 Building Materials
Properties by
The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in
DEMAND!
452-1326
505 Rental Houses 1163 Commercial Rentals Clallam County
PRIME LOCATION
(360)
417-2810
HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES
A 1BD/1BA ....$575/M A 2BD/1BA .....$600/M
in Port Townsend Shipyard
For Lease • Heavy Duty 480 V Power • High Efficiency HVAC
A 2/1.5 TWNHS $775/M
• 6 plus view offices
H 2BD/1BA....$800/M
• 7,000 sf bldg, shop & office like new
H 2BD/1BA....$850/M
• 2,400 sf bldg plus boat storage
H 3BD/1.5BA..$1075/M H 3BD/2BA..$1300/M H 3BD/2BA..$1500/M COMPLETE LIST @
1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles Properties by
Inc.
The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in
DEMAND!
Email: burn@olympus.net
Properties by
SEQ: 740 Spencer Farm R d . 3 B r. , 2 b a . n o pets/smoking. $1050 plus dep. (360)460-8291 SEQ: 941 E. Alder, 3 br., 2 bath, recently rem o d e l e d , n o smoke/pets. $1,150, dep. (360)460-8291.
9820 Motorhomes
UTILITY TRUCK BODY: For 1/2 or 3/4 ton Pick up. Excel. cond. $2,100 obo. (360)344-4141
6140 Wanted & Trades
WE BUY FIREARMS CASH ON THE SPOT ~~~ ANY & ALL ~~~ TO P $ $ $ PA I D I N CLUDING ESTATES AND OR ENTIRE COLLECTIONS Call (360)477-9659
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
WOOD STOVE: Jotul, certified clean burn, 26” wood. $1,200/obo. (360)928-3483
STORAGE UNIT SALES: Quilcene MiniStorage, 294700 HWY 101, Quilcene, WA will sale units #6, 10, 36 & 38 to the highest sealed bidder on October 16, 2015. The units will be opened for viewers at 9:00 am till 10:30 am. Winner of the sealed bids will have 10 days to remove contents. For more information contact Jean Morris @360-3013377 or morrishjean@gmail.com.
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
9802 5th Wheels
‘02 27’ Shasta Camp trailer : Never used, in storage, $12,000 obo. 1995 Nomad, 18 ft. in storage, $4000 (360)765-3372
Forest River: Sierra Lite, ‘00, 21’ clean, 8’ slide, sleeps 6, everything in excellent condition. $6,000. (360)452-2148
9808 Campers & Canopies
CAMPER: ‘88 Conastoga cab-over. Self contained, great shape. $2,000. 683-8781 CARGO TRAILER: 2012 Wells Cargo VFr o n t 6 x 1 4 C a r g o Tra i l e r. L o a d e d a n d ex c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , must see. Less than 7000 miles. More Info at http://bit.ly/1hzVZj5 $4,999. Call Rik (360)460-2472. CARGO TRAILER: Interstate, enclosed, 16’, tandem axels, extra inter ior insulation, side door, 2 rear doors, only 500 miles, excellent condition. $4000. (509)366-4353
ALLEGRO: ‘85 Motorhome. 27’, 454 Chevy, engine runs great, auto. trans., 31K original miles, Sleeps 6-8. New refrigerator , battery and brakes. Air conditioned, T E N T T R A I L E R : ‘ 0 8 Onan generator. $6,000 R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . obo. (360)460-1207. Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, gas/elec. fridge, furnace, toilet with shower, king 7025 Farm Animals and queen beds with & Livestock heated mattresses. Outside gas bbq and showBULL: 4 yr. old Regiser. Great cond. $6,495. tered polled Hereford (360)452-6304 bull, gentle, throws excellent calves. $2,500. TRAILER: 24x8.5’ en(360)452-9822 CHEVY: Motorhome, “89 closed concession/car. Class C 23’ 41K. New Heat and air, $8,500. (360)683-1260 tires, electrical conver7035 General Pets tor, high output alternator. Captain’s chairs and TRAILER: ‘89, 25’ Hi-Lo s o fa . L a r g e f r i g a n d Voyager, completely reD O G A N D P U P P Y freezer. Lots of storage. conditioned, new tires, TRAINING: Training Outstanding condition. AC, customized hitch. $4,750. (360)683-3407. classes star ting Oct $9,750/OBO (360)797-1622 10th for more info Call TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, Cheryl 360-670-5860. MOTORHOME: Damon 2 5 ’ , n e e d s T L C . $6,000/obo. 417-0803. DOGS: 6 male and 2 fe- ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Cummale F1B Goldendoodle mins Diesel, 2 air condi- TRAILER: Bulldog , doupuppies available. They tioners, satellite dish, re- ble axle 16’ flat bed traila r e e x c e l l e n t s e r - built generator, all new er, with ramps. $1,400. vice/therapy dogs and f i l t e r s a n d n ew t i r e s (360)460-2855 family pets. They are $17,000/obo. (360)683-8142 considered hypoallerUTILITY TRAILER: 16’, genic and non-shedding. ramps, tandem axle, curPrice: $1000 Message rent license. $2,250. (775)275-0112 (360)460-0515
LABRADOODLE PUPPIES: $700 obo. Chocolate colored. 3 females 3 males. Mother labradoodle and father is akc standard poodle.vet 6075 Heavy checked. , dewor mer. Equipment Va c c i n a t i o n s . R e a d y now. Penny BALE WAGON: Stack(360)670-5728 liner 1033. Pull type, new tires, new par ts, WELSH CORGIS: Male field ready, works excel- and female, 3 yrs old. lent. 50 hp tractor min $500 ea. Laying hens, @540 rpm, 3 bales wide $5 ea. (360)477-1706 by 7 bales high, 11’ 7” equipment height. $10,000. 9820 Motorhomes (360)683-4295, ext.”0”.
9802 5th Wheels
TIFFIN: ‘04, Phaeton, 40’, diesel, 4 slides, full kitchen, W/D, enclosed 5TH WHEEL: 2000, Forshower, 2nd vanity in est Ranger, 24’, 6 berth, br., auto jacks, duel AC, slide out, A/C. $6500. (360)797-1458 generator, inverter, pullout basement storage, back up camera, lots of ALPENLITE: ‘93 5th i n s i d e s t o ra g e, gr e a t wheel, 24’. New hot condition. $59,950. Se- water heater, fridge, quim. (720)635-4473. stove, toilet, twin matWINNEBAGO:’87 Chief- tresses (2), shocks. tan 22. 35K miles. Roof resealed, includes 5th wheel tail$3500/obo. 808-5605 gate and 5th wheel hitch. $7,000. (360)452-2705 9832 Tents &
CAMPER: Outdoorsman, bed, refrigerator, stove. $1,500. (360)912-2441
TRUCK CAMPER: ‘08 Northstar TC650 pop-up slide in truck camper. This camper is in EXCELLENT/like new condition. Asking $13,500 O B O, s e r i o u s bu ye r s only please. I can be reached @ (253)861-6862
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
BOAT: 10’ Spor t Cat, ‘97, Fiberglass, electric trolling motor, oars, battery and charger, load ramp. $650. (360)681-4766
BOAT: 16’ Sunrunner. 120hp Mercruiser, Lorance finder/plotter, marine radio, rod holders, life jackets, boat hook, t e n d e r s, ex . p r o p. a l l manuals, dual batteries, nice cover and Canton downrigger, Calkins trailer. All ready for fishing. $2,200 obo, (360)4775430
B OAT: ‘ 7 4 L i g h t n i n g sailboat, 19’. On trailer. $1000 obo. 460-6231
BOAT: ‘88 Invader, 16’, 1 6 5 H P M e r c r u i s e r, open bow, low hours. $2,900. (360)452-5419.
B O AT : S e a r a y, 1 8 ’ , 135hp Mercury. $8,000 obo. (360)457-3743 or (360)460-0862
B OAT T R A I L E R : ‘ 9 9 , 20’ Heavy duty, custom. $1,500. (360)775-6075
C-Dory: 22’ Angler model, 75hp Honda, 8hp Nissan, E-Z load trailer, like new. $16,500/obo 4524143 or 477-6615.
SHAMROCK CUDDY 20’ 302 CIPCM, inboard, 15 hp 4 stroke, Honda Inc. BOUNDER: ‘95, 70,000 kicker, fish finder, GPS, Travel Trailers 6080 Home miles, blue book value, ROCKWOOD, ‘10, 5th Scotty elec. downr igFurnishings $ 1 0 , 3 0 0 s e l l i n g f o r FLEETWOOD: ‘00, 26’, wheel, 26’, many extras, gers, load r ite trailer, $7500 o.b.o. runs great. b e l o w b o o k va l u e @ very clean. $8,500. Slideout. $6.900. COFFEE TABLE: Cus(360)797-4211 $23,000. (360)457-5696. (360)452-6677 (360)452-7377 t o m b ra s s, o a k , r o p e ship’s wheel. 42” D, 16” H, 1/2” Glass top. Mancave/boat ready. $800. (360)457-4576.
The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in
DEMAND!
452-1326 452-1326
PA: 1Br, 1ba. Central, W/D, no pets. $650 mo. (360)417-8250
6050 Firearms & Ammunition
FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special $499. (360)582-7910 www.portangelesfire wood.com
• 300 & 70 Ton Travel lift service to door Call Mark: 360-531-1080
Case 888 Excavator 1989-1990 Case 888 with less than 100 hours pro-rebuilt hyd fuel pumps. 8876 hrs, 6 c y l t u r b o. R u n s great! Text 360-4772134. Cashier’s check p ay m e n t a t p i ck u p. $25k
ELECTRIC FIREPLACE Like new 25.5 H x 32 W $75. (360)437-0914
• Bridge Cranes
A 2BD/1BA ....$650/M
H 2/1 LK DAWN ..$850/M
6125 Tools
37’ Diesel pusher 300 WANTED TO BUY: Ce- Cummins 6 Speed Allidar Shakes and beer son Trans. 6500 Watt Gen, 2 Slides, levelers E l e c t r i c a l B u i l d i n g kegs. (360)925-9645 Awnings, day & night Supplies: Electrical conWANTED: Wood-Mizer shades corin counters, 2 trol panel par ts. $4hydraulic sawmill. Have each AC TVs Heaters, Inc. $150. (360)452-6580 cash. (360)276-4870 tow Package,excellent cond. Call for more de6045 Farm Fencing 8120 Garage Sales t a i l s $ 3 9 , 0 0 0 . O B O. (360)582-6434 or & Equipment Jefferson County (928)210-6767
TWO OFFICES IN DOWNTOWN SEQUIM GAZETTE BUILDING FOR SUB-LEASE 448-sq-ft for $500 mo., 240-sq-ft for $350 mo. Perfect for accountant or other professional. S h a r e d c o n fe r e n c e room, restroom, wired for high-speed Internet. Contact John Brewer, publisher, (360)417-3500
SOFA: Leather, charc o a l g r e y, ex c e l l e n t , gently used. $495. 6817996
6100 Misc. Merchandise DOWNSIZING: Antique mohair sofa, deep red, $300; antique Morris chair, $350; bar-height glass topped table with 4 chairs, $250; queen size brass bed, includes box spring mattress, $200; dark brown leather rec l i n e r, $ 2 2 5 ; m e d i u m brown leather recliner, $225; Nordictrack spinn i n g c y c l e, $ 5 0 . C a l l 360-461-0276 for details/pictures. Garage and Shop D o o rs : N ew r e m o d e l plans changed-sell at cost call for sizes and $ install also avail. 360732-4626
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Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., Port Angeles Port Angeles, WA 98362 Sequim Gazette/Peninsula Daily News 147 W. Washington, Sequim or FAX to: (360) 417-3507 NO PHONE CALLS
3A574499
New roof, carpet & fresh paint. Carefree living in West Alder Estates, a 55+ park. Water, sewer, & trash included in m o n t h l y fe e o f $ 3 7 0 . Wa l k i n g d i s t a n c e t o shopping/services. Nice, clean & move in ready. 1568 SF, 2BR/2BA. Pets allowed with approval. MLS#291317/810772 $63,500 Cathy Reed lic# 4553 Windermere THIS IS THE ONE! Real Estate 3.77 Acres Of PastureSequim East land; Soils Are Regis360-460-1800 tered, Level; Power & Phone to Property, ComLet’s make a deal For both of the only two munity Water Share is lots left in Sun Mead- Paid, Horses Allowed; ows. Easy build on this C l o s e t o D u n g e n e s s level lot in desirable gat- Recreation Area & Wilded community. Great lo- life Refuge MLS#857981/291953 cation in county just min$130,000 utes from town with Tyler Conkle convenient access to lic# 112797 hwy 101 for the commut(360)683-6880 er. Includes community WINDERMERE water and community SUNLAND septic/drainfield connection in the price of the Waterview Home lot. No extra fees for hookups. Mild cc&r’s & Wa t e r a n d M o u n t a i n hoa fees to protect your View home on one acre investment. Available rv i n d e s i r a b l e S e q u i m parking for owners and n e i g h b o r h o o d o f f e r s hook up’s available for main level living, 2 eleminimal fee. Dr ive by vated view decks, granand take a look only 2 i t e c o u n t e r s, g a s r e place, beautifully left! landscaping featuring a MLS#291928 $55,000 waterfall, pond and low Shawnna Rigg maintenance turf. (360)683-1500 MLS#291853 $399,500 RE/MAX Deborah Norman Brokers Group Sophistication & VIEWS Real Estate World class views from Professionals almost every window in (360)460.9961 this 2,343 sf superb quality 3 bed + den/2.5 WATERVIEW bath recently completed h o m e i n t h e f r i e n d l y The circular drive and neighborhood of Solana. stately entr y welcome High end features include you into this bright and white oak hardwood open floor plan. The floors w/ light walnut stain u p p e r l e v e l f e a t u r e s throughout the main liv- vaulted ceilings with huge ing area, living room w/ picture windows and expropane fireplace w/ fig- posed beams with track ured maple mantle, luxu- lighting. The kitchen and rious kitchen w/ granite dining area lead out to a counter tops & travertine deck with spectacular tile backsplash, stainless w a t e r a n d m o u n t a i n steel professional grade views. A private covered appliances & soft close deck with hot tub and wacustom cherry cabinets. ter view can be accessed Master suite w/ private from the master bath. deck, walk in closet w/ The lower level’s family dressing area, custom tile room leads out to a covshower & a relaxing jet- ered patio and fenced backyard with fruit trees. ted tub. MLS#291699 $299,000 MLS#291312 $550,000 Rhonda Baublits Kelly Johnson (360)461-4898 (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES PORT ANGELES
311 For Sale Manufactured Homes
WAREHOUSE: (2) - 36’ x 40’ with office/bathr o o m , E . P. A . 1 7 5 S. B ay v i e w. $ 7 0 0 / m o. each. (360)457-1294 or (360)808-2157
591423628
Just listed! Super location, close to town, water and mountain view’s from your premier deck in this 3br 3ba home. There is a separate entr y to the down stairs bedroom, bath, shop and garage. Newer floor coverings, appliances and many upgrades. MLS#291943 $256,700 Mike Fuller Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 360-683-3900
OPEN FLOOR PLAN Newer & Spacious 3 BD, 2 BA, 1810 SF, War m Colors, Vaulted Ceilings, Propane Fireplace, Walk-In Pantry in Kitchen, Cabinets w/PullOuts, Master Bath Has 2 S i n k s & S o a k Tu b, O ve r s i ze d G a r a g e, 4 Raised Garden Beds, Covered Deck. MLS#837928/291741 $295,000 Deb Kahle Lic#47224 (360)683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
C O R N E R L OT: We s t side of Por t Angeles, area of newer homes, West 10th and Madeline Streets. $55,000/obo. (360)460-3694
5A1415403
Golfers Golfers, investors beware! not many lots left to build your dream home on. Centrally loc a t e d c l o s e t o t ow n , medical, restaurants and shopping. Bus line a v a i l a b i l i t y n e a r b y. Driveby and take a look, or walk the golf cart path to capture the stunning views of what could be yo u r “ we l l m a n i c u r e d b a ck ya r d ” . G o r g e o u s n o r t h e r n l y v i ew s b e tween the trees of the straits and victoria, westernly lush green landscape between the 8th and 9th holes. MLS#270718 $132,000 Shawnna Rigg (360)683-1500 RE/MAX
LOVELY REMODELED HOME 3BR, 2 BA, mountain views and large yard. Conveniently located to Carrie Blake Park. New roof, new silestone counter tops, new red oak flooring, new vinyl siding & new appliances. Back yard is fully fenced with fruit trees & raised garden beds. Pull through paved concrete RV parking with power, water & dump. MLS#291708/835649 $295,000 Roland Miller 360-461-4116 TOWN & COUNTRY
308 For Sale Lots & Acreage
SEQUIM: 1Br Waterfront. $850. (360)8084444. See tour at w w w. s e q u i m r e n t a l homes.com
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
BIG PRICE REDUCTION Beautiful 5.11 AC parcel close to 3 golf courses. Located in the Sequim countryside and waiting for your dream home. This is 325 ft x 640 ft. Plant your seeds in the coming year and enjoy your bounty. Price now is $179,500. Call BECKY for more information and directions. MLS#290212 $179,500. Rebecca Jackson UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0147
Living Surrounded by Nature 4,156 sq ft home on 5 PRIVATE acres nestled w/mature trees & pond. 1800 sq ft of covered p o r c h e s, 5 b e d s, 3 . 5 baths, extremely large kitchen, for mal dining r o o m , fa m i l y - r o o m , 2 wood fireplaces, large detached 2-car garage, big fenced in areas for animals. Potential to live and operate business there! MLS#291947 $389,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen
P.A.: 2.48 acres, with 14 x 70 mobile, covered decks front and back, newly painted inside and out lots of upgrades inside, county maintained t o t h e d r i ve w ay. D r y Creek water. $127,500. (360)775-9996
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
Attention Buyer’s Agents 1020 Talus, Sequim 1961 sf. open concept 2 Br. 2Ba. plus Den Like new, upgrades++, light, bright, mt. view. $299,900. (360)232-4223 or 775-7281
LAKE SUTHERLAND Best location for those we e ke n d g e t a - way s. Located in the Maple G r o ve c o m m u n i t y o n Lake Sutherland. Your own assigned dock for boats. Swimming, skiing/all kinds of summer fun! Or if you’re looking fo r a c o o l w i n t e r g e t away this is it. MLS#291963/852743 $90,000 Cathy Reed lic# 4553 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East 360-460-1800
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
Acreage w/RV Garage Ve r y g e n t l y s l o p e d 5-acre parcel w/installed well & soils test completed. New 60x40 enclosed RV g a ra g e / s h o p w i t h 4 0 x 1 0 c o ve r e d p a t i o AND a small building for storage too. Very quiet area. MLS#291831/844006 $200,000 Carolyn & Robert Dodds lic# 73925 & 48709 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East 360-460-9248
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015 B7
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57
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ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser’s responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmless Black Press Ltd./ Sound Publishing, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., reserves the right to disclose a user’s identity where deemed necessary to protect Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 9050 Marine Miscellaneous
9180 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks Classics & Collect. Others
DURA: ‘86 , 14’ Aluminum ‘81 15 hp Johnson, electric motor, new batt e r y, 5 g a l l o n t a n k . $2,000. (360)640-1220.
VW: ‘85 Cabriolet, con- TOYOTA: ‘99 Tacoma vertable., Red, new tires Extended Cab SR5 4X4 / b a t t e r y , 5 s p . - 3.4L V6, 5 Speed $1,900/obo Manual, Centerline (360)683-7144 Forged Alloy Wheels, Good 33 BFGoodrich VW: Karmann Ghia, All-Terrain Tires, Tow ‘74. $4,500. Pa ck a g e , B e d l i n e r, (360)457-7184 Rear Slider, Air Conditioning, Kenwood CD Dual Front Air9292 Automobiles Stereo, bags. Others $11,995 VIN# DODGE: ‘73, Dart, good 5TEWN72N9YZ697189 condition, runs well, GRAY MOTORS bench seat, 88K ml. 457-4901 $5,000. (360)797-1179. graymotors.com
FIBERFORM: ‘78, 24’ Cuddy Cabin, 228 Mercruiser I/O, ‘07 Mercury 9.9hp, electronics, d o w n r i g g e r s . $11,000/obo 775-0977
FORD: ‘01 Crown Victoria, LX, 113K ml., origiSKI BOAT: ‘73 Kona. nal owner. $3,900. (360)461-5661 18’ classic jet ski boat. 500 c.i. olds. engine. B e r k l e y p u m p . To o FORD: ‘70, 500, 4dr.,3 much to mention, needs speed stick, 302, new ex h a u s t , n ew t i r e s / upholstry. $2500. wheels. $2,650/obo (209)768-1878 (360)452-4156 or (360)681-7478
9817 Motorcycles
9556 SUVs Others CHEVY: (2) Suburbans. ‘87 and ‘83. $500 ea. (360)928-9436 C H E V Y : ‘ 9 9 , Ta h o e , 4x4, 4 dr. all factory options. $3,500. (360)4524156 or (361)461-7478.
FORD: ‘91 Thunderbird Sport. High output 5 liter FORD: ‘98 Explorer HARLEY DAVIDSON: V- 8 , Au t o m a t i c, r u n s XLT 4X4 - 4.0L SOHC V 6 , Au t o m a t i c, A l l oy ‘ 0 4 L o w R i d e r. 3 7 0 0 good. $995. 460-0783 W h e e l s, G o o d T i r e s, miles, loaded, $8,500. HONDA CIVIC: ‘04 Hy- To w Pa c k a g e , R o o f (360)460-6780 brid, one owner, excel., Rack, Pr ivacy Glass, Keyless Entr y, Power H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N : cond., $6500. 683-7593 Windows, Door Locks, ‘06, XL1200 Spor tster. HYUNDAI: ‘92 Sonata, and Mirrors, Cruise $5,900. (360)452-6677 l o w m i l e s , 5 s p. d e - Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, Kenwood CD H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N pendable. $1,250. Stereo, Dual Front Air(360)775-8251 ‘93, Wide glide, black bags. with chrome. $10,500 JAGUAR: ‘83, 350 Che$3,995 /obo. (360)477-3670. vy engine and transmisVIN# sion, many new par ts. 1FMZU34E2WZC00770 Harley Wide Glide: ‘93 GRAY MOTORS w e l l m a i n t a i n e d L o w $1,500/obo. (360)452457-4901 miles, custom paint ex- 4156 or (360)681-7478. graymotors.com tras. $6,800 TEXT 360MAZDA: ‘01 Miata. Sil300-7587 ver w/beige leather in- GMC: ‘98 Jimmy SLE, H / D , ‘ 0 5 D y n a W i d e terior. 53K mi. $8,000. Great Deal. White, one owner, good condition, Glide, blk with lots of (360)808-7858 213K miles, V6, 4WD, chrome, lots of aftermark e t s t u f f + e x t r a s . SMART CAR: ‘09 23k 4-speed Auto trans. with miles, Barbus, loaded, over drive, towing pack$9,500. (360)461-4189. age, PS/PB, Disc ABS $9,500. (360)344-4173 brakes, AC, $2250 o.b.o. HD: ‘81 XLS Sportster. TOYOTA: ‘14 Prius C. Call (206) 920-1427 1,000 cc, 9K. $2,500. 1200 miles, like new, (360)683-5449 KIA: ‘08 Rondo LX V6, with warranty. $16,900. low miles. Auto., loaded HONDA: 1979 GL1000, (360)683-2787 runs great. $6800/obo. Lots of extras $1700. (360)460-1207 TOYOTA : ‘ 9 8 C a m r y, (360)477-5809 217K ml. 2 owner car. H O N DA : ‘ 8 3 V F 7 5 0 , $3,700/obo. $1,500. (360)457-0253 (360)928-9645 evenings. V W: ‘ 1 3 J e t t a T D I , 4 H O N D A : ‘ 8 4 S a b r e , door, diesel, sunroof, 1100cc. runs excellent. GPS, 75K miles. $1,100. (360)775-6075 $24,000. (320)232-5436 H O N DA : ‘ 9 6 X R 6 5 0 L VW: ‘86 Cabriolet, conDual Sport. $2,400. ver tible. Wolfberg Edi(360)683-8183 tion, all leather interior, new top. Call for details. HONDA: ‘98 VFR 800. $4,000. (360)477-3725. Red, fuel injected V-4, 1 0 0 + h p , 2 3 K m i . , 9434 Pickup Trucks c l e a n , fa s t , ex t r a s . Others $4,500. (360)385-5694 K AWA S A K I : ‘ 0 6 N o mad. Very clean. Lots of extras. $6,000 obo. Mike at (360)477-2562 SUZUKI: ‘08 Burgman Executive 650. 9k mi. Incl. extra windshield, GPS and misc. accessories. $4,500. (360)681-2779 SUZUKI: 1993 DR350, R u n s, bu t ve r y c l e a n parts bike $600. HONDA: 1988 NX125, Parts bike $300. (360)477-5809
9742 Tires & Wheels WHEELS AND TIRES: (4) Bridgestone Dueler H/T, 225/65 R17 tires, new cond. $400. Wheels ( 4 ) 1 7 ” Toyo t a R av 4 Limited, new cond. with tire pressure sensors. $600. (360)461-6846
9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect. 1 9 3 0 R o a d s t e r. 1 9 3 0 Ford Model A Roadster pickup truck. Beautiful teal green exterior with black fenders and interior and customized vinyl c o nve r t i bl e t o p. 1 9 8 6 Nissan running gear rec e n t l y t u n e d u p. R e ceived many trophies; s t i l l g e t s s t a r e s. A p praised at $30,000; priced at $22,500 to sell. Call 360-775-7520 or 457-3161.
BMW: ‘07 Z4 3.0 SI R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke new. $17,999. (360)477-4573 CADILLAC: ‘84 El Dorado Coupe 62K ml., exc. cond. 4.1L V8, $8,500. (360)452-7377
CADILLAC: ‘85, Eldorado Biarritz, clean inside and out. 109k ml. $4,500. (360)681-3339. MAZDA: ‘88, RX 7, convertable, nice, fresh motor and tans. $7,000. (360)477-5308 V O L K S WA G O N : ‘ 7 8 Beetle convertable. Fuel injection, yellow in color. $9000. (360)681-2244
NISSAN: ‘03 Murano SL AWD. 146K miles. Runs G r e a t . Ju s t d e t a i l e d . Service record available Has floor mats plus carCHEV: ‘95 3/4 ton, 4x4 go area divider and covex. cab, long bed. with er roof rack and trailer canopy. $3,000. Sequim hitch. $7,000. (425)220-1929 Call 360 477-2619 for CHEVY: ‘95, 1 ton, 6.5L more info. diesel, 4x4 flatbed. Quit running and don’t want 9730 Vans & Minivans to fix it. Also 454 big Others block engine for sale, $400, runs. $2,000. Call CHEV: ‘03 Astro Cargo (360)683-4295. Va n , 1 0 2 , 0 0 0 m i l e s , FORD: ‘01 Ranger XLT $4,500 o.b.o. (360)477-8591 4X4 Supercab - 4.0L SOHC V6, Automatic, CHEVY: ‘06 Uplander, A l l oy W h e e l s, B ra n d nice cond. 92K miles. New BFG All-Terrain $6,800. (360)683-1260 Tires, Matching Hard Tonneau Cover, Spray- CHRYSLER: ‘98 MiniIn Bedliner, Tow Pack- van, great shape, clean. age, Rear Sliding Win- $3400. (360)477-2562 dow, Running Boards, Privacy Glass, 4 Doors, 9933 Sequim Keyless Entr y, Power Windows, Door Locks, Legals and Mirrors, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, 6 CD Stereo, Dual Front Airbags. 90K Ml. $9,995 Notice of Adoption of Existing VIN# Environmental Document 1FTZR15E91PA54834 July 22, 2015 GRAY MOTORS Description of proposal 457-4901 The City of Sequim is updating its graymotors.com Comprehensive Plan to comply FORD: ‘05 F150 Lariat. 5.4, 4x4, like new. Sunroof and bed slide. 83K miles,$13,500. 683-1260 FORD: ‘08 Ranger. 4 door, 4x4 with canopy, stick shift. $16,000. (360)477-2713 FORD: ‘97 Diesel 4WD Power stroke with bedliner, canopy, new tires, transmission overhauled $6,800. (360)461-3232 FORD: F-350 Super Duty ‘03, Dually V-10 Auto, cruise, incredible A/C, 11ft ser vice box,1,600lb Tommy Lift, all top quality, runs perfect always maintained with syn oil, set up to tow anything but never has. Truck belonged to the owner of a elevator company so it’s had an easy life. 162K miles uses no oil, truck needs nothing. $8,500. (360)477-6218 Sequim
NISSAN: ‘03 Frontier C r ew C a b X E 4 X 4 3.3L V6, Automatic, Alloy Wheels, Running Boards, Matching Canopy, Bedliner, Tow Ball, Roof Rack, Privacy Glass, Keyless Entry, 4 Full Doors, Power Windows, Door Locks, and Mirrors, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, Kenwood CD Stereo, D u a l Fr o n t A i r b a g s . 100K ml. $12,995 Vin# 1N6ED29Y43C452600 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com
with the requirements of the Growth management Act. The City is proposing the following legislative actions: adoption of an updated Vision and plan policies; and amendment of the Future Land Use Map. In compliance with the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA), and after independent review by the Responsible Official, the City is adopting the following existing, relevant SEPA documents, to address the environmental impacts of the Proposal: The determination of significance (DS)/scoping notice for the 1996 Comprehensive Plan; the EIS for the 1996 Comprehensive Plan; and the SEPA checklist for the 2006 Comprehensive Plan Update. A SEPA Addendum for the Proposal has been prepared. The previously prepared SEPA documents are available for review on the City’s website, at http://wa-sequim.civicplus.com/index.aspx?NID=565. Copies of the addendum are also available for review or purchase (CDs) at the Department of Community Development on the website previously referenced, and at the address below, on weekdays between the hours of 8:00 and 4:30. Adoption of the 2015 Comprehensive Plan is expected by the end of 2015. Public comment concerning the addendum may be expressed from now until the City Council public hearing. Public notice announcements are provided for the Planning Commission public meetings and the City Council public hearings when the meetings are officially scheduled. For further information, please contact: Chris Hugo, Responsible Official and Director, Sequim Department of Community Development, 152 W. Cedar St., Sequim, WA. (360) 681-3435. Chris Hugo, SEPA Responsible Official Pub: October 7, 2015 Legal No: 661454
9934 Jefferson County Legals
9934 Jefferson County Legals
TS No WA08000186-15-1 APN 721194011 TO No 150064060-WA-MSO NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON CHAPTER 61.24 ET. SEQ. I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on November 6, 2015, 10:00 AM, at main entrance Superior Courthouse, 1820 Jefferson St, Port Townsend, WA, MTC Financial Inc. dba Trustee Corps, the undersigned Trustee, will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable, in the form of cash, or cashier’s check or certified checks from federally or State chartered banks, at the time of sale the following described real property, situated in the County of Jefferson, State of Washington, towit: PARCEL 2 OF THORNDYKE BAY NO. 3 SHORT PLAT, AS PER PLAT RECORDED UN VOLUME 1 OF SHORT PLATS, PAGES 117 AND 1 1 8 , R E C O R D S O F J E F F E R S O N C O U N T Y, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF WASHINGTON. APN: 721194011 More commonly known as 42 GROVES WAY, PORT LUDLOW, WA 98365 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of October 3, 2007, executed by DANIEL R. NIBLOCK, AS HIS SEPARATE ESTATE as Trustor(s), to secure obligations in favor of ING BANK, FSB as original Beneficiary recorded October 10, 2007 as Instrument No. 528126 of official records in the Office of the Recorder of Jefferson County, Washington. II. No action commenced by Capital One, N.A., as successor by merger to ING Bank, F.S.B., the current Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrowers’ or Grantors’ default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust/Mortgage. Current Beneficiary: Capital One, N.A., as successor by merger to ING Bank, F.S.B. Contact Phone No: (877) 230-8516 Address: PO Box 21887, Egan, MN 55121-0887 III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY WHEN DUE THE FOLLOWING AMOUNTS WHICH ARE NOW IN ARREARS: DELINQUENT PAYMENT INFORMATION From June 1, 2014 To June 30, 2015 Number of Pa y m e n t s 9 $ 1 , 0 6 8 . 6 2 4 $ 1 , 3 4 1 . 6 0 To t a l $14,983.98 LATE CHARGE INFORMATION June 1, 2014 June 30, 2015 $267.15 PROMISSORY NOTE INFORMATION Note Dated: October 3, 2007 Note Amount: $350,000.00 Interest Paid To: May 1, 2014 Next Due Date: June 1, 2014 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: The principal sum of $329,829.63, together with interest as provided in the Note or other instrument secured, and such other costs and fees as are due under the Note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V. The above described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. Said sale will be made without warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances on November 6, 2015. The defaults referred to in Paragraph III must be cured by October 26, 2015, (11 days before the sale date) to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before October 26, 2015 (11 days before the sale) the default as set forth in Paragraph III is cured and the Trustees’ fees and costs are paid. Payment must be in cash or with cashiers’ or certified checks from a State or federally chartered bank. The sale may be terminated any time after the October 26, 2015 (11 days before the sale date) and before the sale, by the Borrower or Grantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance by paying the principal and interest, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust. VI. A written Notice of Default was transmitted by the current Beneficiary, Capital One, N.A., as successor by merger to ING Bank, F.S.B. or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the foll o w i n g a d d r e s s ( e s ) : A D D R E S S U N K N OW N SPOUSE OF DANIEL R. NIBLOCK 42 GROVES WAY, PORT LUDLOW, WA 98365-9543 DANIEL R. NIBLOCK 42 GROVES WAY, PORT LUDLOW, WA 98365-9543 DANIEL R. NIBLOCK 4011 FREMONT AVE N, SEATTLE, WA 98103-7739 DANIEL R. NIBLOCK 42 GROVES WAY, PORT LUDLOW, WA 98365 DANIEL R. NIBLOCK 612 HEWITT AVE, BREMERTON, WA 98337 by both first class and certified mail on April 3, 2015, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served, if applicable, with said written Notice of Default or the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real proper ty described in Paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above described property. IX. Anyone having any objections to this sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustees’ Sale. X. If the Borrower received a letter under RCW 61.24.031: THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME. You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date on this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you might eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission: Telephone: (877) 894-4663 or (800) 6064819 Website: www.wshfc.org The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development: Telephone: (800) 569-4287 Website: www.hud.gov The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorn ey s : Te l e p h o n e : ( 8 0 0 ) 6 0 6 - 4 8 1 9 We b s i t e : www.homeownership.wa.gov NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS – The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under the Unlawful Detainer Act, Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with wr itten notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060; Dated: June 30, 2015 MTC Financial Inc. dba Trustee Corps, as Duly Appointed Successor Trustee By: Patrick Lynch, Authorized Signatory MTC Financial Inc. dba Trustee Corps 1700 Seventh Avenue, Suite 2100 Seattle WA 98101 Phone: (800) 409-7530 TDD: (800) 833-6388 For Reinstatement/Pay Off Quotes, contact MTC Financial Inc. DBA Trustee Corps TRUSTEE’S SALE INFORMATION CAN BE OBTAINED ONLINE AT www.insourcelogic.com. Order No. WA15-000527-2, Pub Dates 10/07/2015, 10/28/2015 Pub: October 7, 28, 2015 Legal No: 661474
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9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR CLALLAM COUNTY In re the Estate of Alta G. Wilson, Deceased. NO. 15-4-00321-6 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of First Publication: September 30, 2015 Personal Representative: Cheryl A. Warden Attorney for Personal Representative: Stephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 Address for mailing or service: PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 457-3327 Court of Probate Proceedings: Clallam County Superior Court Probate Cause Number: 15-4-00321-6 Pub: September 30, October 7, 14, 2015 Legal No: 659789 SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR CLALLAM COUNTY In re the Estate of Charles Robert Smith, Deceased. NO. 15-4-00313-5 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The Co-Personal Representatives named below have been appointed as Co-Personal Representatives of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Co-Personal Representatives or the Co-Personal Representatives’ attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Co-Personal Representatives served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of First Publication: September 30, 2015 Co-Personal Representatives: Kathryn C. Smith and Russell T. Smith Attorney for Co-Personal Representatives: Stephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 Address for mailing or service: PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 457-3327 Court of Probate Proceedings: Clallam County Superior Court Probate Cause Number: 15-4-00313-5 Pub: September 30, October 7, 14, 2015 Legal No: 659786 SUPERIOR COURT OF WA S H I N G TO N F O R CLALLAM COUNTY In re the Estate of Shirley M. Palmer-Bates, Deceased. NO. 15-400293-7 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030, The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representatives served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided u n d e r R C W 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication o f t h e n o t i c e. I f t h e claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of First Publication: October 7, 2015, Personal Representative: Judith Burkhardt-Ritzman, Address for mailing or service: 5083 Beach Drive, Po r t O r c h a r d , WA 98366, (360) 460-1977, Cour t of Probate Proceedings: Clallam County Superior Court Probate Cause Number: 15-4-00293-7 Pub: October 7, 14, 21, 2015 Legal No:661582
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NO. 15-4-00299-6 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: RICHARD V. DAVIDSON, Deceased. The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any persons having a claim against the Decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the Decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of first publication: October 7, 2015 Personal Representative: Shelly Romero Attorney for Personal Representative: Curtis G. Johnson, WSBA #8675 Address for Mailing or Service: Law Office of Curtis G. Johnson, P.S. 230 E. 5th Street Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 452-3895 Pub: October 7, 14, 21, 2015 Legal No. 661463
No: 15-7-00245-8 15-7-00246-6 Notice and Summons by Publication (Dependency) (SMPB) SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON COUNTY OF CLALLAM JUVENILE COURT Dependency of: MATTHEWS-FOWLER, CLEOPATRA DOB: 02/27/1998 MATTHEWS-FOWLER, KYLE DOB: 02/06/2001 To: RONNIE FOWLER alleged Father, and/or ANYONE WITH A PATERNAL INTEREST IN THE CHILDREN A Dependency Petition was filed on SEPTEMBER 11TH, 2015; A Dependency First Set Fact Finding hearing will be held on this matter on: OCTOBER 28TH, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. at Clallam County Juvenile Services, 1912 W. 18th Street, Port Angeles, WA, 98363. YOU SHOULD BE PRESENT AT THIS HEARING. THE HEARING WILL DETERMINE IF YOUR CHILD IS DEPENDENT AS DEFINED IN RCW 13.34.050(5). THIS BEGINS A JUDICIAL PROCESS WHICH COULD RESULT IN PERMANENT LOSS OF YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS. IF YOU D O N OT A P P E A R AT T H E H E A R I N G , T H E COURT MAY ENTER A DEPENDENCY ORDER IN YOUR ABSENCE. To request a copy of the Notice, Summons, and Dependency Petition, call DSHS at 360-565-2240 Port Angeles/DSHS or 360-374-3530 Forks/DSHS. To view information about your rights, including right to a lawyer, go to www.atg.wa.gov/DPY.aspx. Dated: SEPTEMBER 16TH, 2015 W. BRENT BASDEN Commissioner BARBARA CHRISTENSEN County Clerk JENNIFER CLARK Deputy Clerk PUB: September 23, 30 October 7, 2015 Legal No. 658443
PROPOSED CHARTER AMENDMENTS
The Washington State Constitution requires proposed amendments to a county’s home rule charter be published in the legal newspaper of the local jurisdiction once a week for four consecutive weeks prior to the amendments being submitted to the voters. See Wash. Const. art. XI, section 4. The Clallam County Charter Review Commission submits, the following proposed amendments to the Clallam County Home Rule Charter, which will appear on the upcoming November 2015 ballot.
Amendment No. 1 ELECTIONS FOR BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS The Clallam County Charter Review Commission proposes an amendment to the Clallam County Home Rule Charter, concerning elections of Commissioners to the Board of County Commissioners. This amendment would require each Commissioner to be nominated and elected solely by the voters of his or her represented district, replacing the provision that allows each Commissioner to be elected at large, i.e. by a countywide majority, during the general election. Should this amendment be: Approved….. Rejected ….. ______________________________________________________________
Amendment No. 2 FREQUENCY OF CHARTER REVIEW The Clallam County Charter Review Commission proposes an amendment to the Clallam County Home Rule Charter, concerning the frequency the County reviews its Home Rule Charter. This amendment would require Clallam County to review its Home Rule Charter, by electing commissioners to serve on a Charter Review Commission, every five (5) years instead of every eight (8) years. Should this amendment be: Approved….. Rejected ….. ______________________________________________________________
Amendment No. 3 TRANSMISSION OF INITIATIVES TO VOTERS The Clallam County Charter Review Commission proposes an amendment to t h e C l a l l a m C o u n t y H o m e R u l e C h a r t e r, c o n c e r n i n g t h e B o a r d o f Commissioners’ participation in transmitting citizen initiatives. This amendment would require qualified initiatives to be proposed directly to the voters without prior consideration, adoption, or rejection by the Board of County Commissioners. Should this amendment be: Approved….. Rejected ….. ______________________________________________________________
Amendment No. 4 TRANSMISSION OF REFERENDA TO VOTERS The Clallam County Charter Review Commission proposes an amendment to t h e C l a l l a m C o u n t y H o m e R u l e C h a r t e r, c o n c e r n i n g t h e B o a r d o f Commissioners’ participation in transmitting citizen referenda. This amendment would require qualified referenda to be proposed directly to the voters without prior consideration, adoption, or rejection by the Board of County Commissioners. Should this amendment be: Approved….. Rejected ….. ______________________________________________________________
Amendment No. 5 SIGNATURE GATHERING FOR INITIATIVES The Clallam County Charter Review Commission proposes an amendment to the Clallam County Home Rule Charter, concerning the time period to gather signatures for citizen initiatives. This amendment would increase the time for gathering signatures for initiatives from ninety (90) days to one hundred and twenty (120) days. Should this amendment be: Approved….. Rejected ….. ______________________________________________________________ Amendment No. 6
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR The Clallam County Charter Review Commission proposes an amendment to the Clallam County Home Rule Charter, concerning the Director of the Department of Community Development (DCD). This amendment would require the DCD Director to become an office appointed by the Board of County Commissioners instead of an office elected by the voting public at large. Should this amendment be: Approved….. Rejected ….. ______________________________________________________________
Amendment No. 7 HOME RULE CHARTER INTERPRETATION The Clallam County Charter Review Commission proposes an amendment to the Clallam County Home Rule Charter, concerning the interpretation of the Clallam County Home Rule Charter. This amendment would require charter interpretations to afford Clallam County those powers conferred to charter counties under state law and this home rule charter. Should this amendment be: Approved….. Rejected ….. ______________________________________________________________ Amendment No. 8
CHARTER REVIEW COMMISSIONERS’ ELECTED TERM The Clallam County Charter Review Commission proposes an amendment to the Clallam County Home Rule Charter, concerning the Charter Review Commission Members’ one-year term of office. This amendment would cause the commissioners’ one-year term to begin on the first day of January, instead of beginning on the day of their election. Should this amendment be: Approved….. Rejected ….. Pub: September 24, 30, October 7, 14, 2015 Legal No: 659216
B10
WeatherWatch
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015 Neah Bay 57/52
➡
Bellingham 61/53 g
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 60/51
Port Angeles 59/50
Olympics Snow level: 10,000 feet
Forks 62/53
Sequim 61/49
Port Ludlow 64/50
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 66 45 0.00 16.60 Forks 75 48 0.00 51.28 Seattle 74 51 0.00 21.04 Sequim 68 48 0.00 9.15 Hoquiam 76 55 0.00 25.73 Victoria 68 47 0.00 17.20 Port Townsend 66 39 **0.00 9.97
Last
New
First
Forecast highs for Wednesday, Oct. 7
Sunny
➡
Low 50 Rain, rain, what can I say?
FRIDAY
62/52 Likely to return another day
64/52 It’s back again today
Marine Conditions
Billings 76° | 50°
San Francisco 69° | 57°
Minneapolis 65° | 41° Chicago 67° | 60°
Denver 74° | 46°
Atlanta 82° | 57°
El Paso 75° | 59° Houston 90° | 68°
Fronts
Port Angeles Port Townsend
SUNDAY
62/50 62/50 Faces and cars Until we shout, it will spray “Go away!”
CANADA
Seattle 61° | 55°
Spokane 62° | 52°
Tacoma 62° | 56°
Olympia 63° | 53°
Yakima 69° | 54° Astoria 65° | 54°
ORE.
TODAY
Oct 12
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow Moonset tomorrow
© 2015 Wunderground.com
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo
TOMORROW
Hi 63 73 65 46 77 73 66 85 67 64 83 55 77 61 88 67
Lo 46 56 52 39 54 60 46 57 44 41 66 34 53 48 65 55
6:41 p.m. 7:23 a.m. 3:07 a.m. 4:54 p.m.
Prc
Otlk Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy .01 PCldy Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Cldy Clr Clr Cldy PCldy Rain
FRIDAY
High Tide Ht 9:48 a.m. 7.0’ 9:34 p.m. 7.0’
Low Tide Ht 3:15 a.m. 1.0’ 3:45 p.m. 2.9’
High Tide Ht 10:35 a.m. 7.2’ 10:32 p.m. 7.2’
Low Tide Ht 4:11 a.m. 1.0’ 4:41 p.m. 2.3’
High Tide Ht 11:14 a.m. 7.6’ 11:21 p.m. 7.4’
Low Tide 4:58 a.m. 5:26 p.m.
Ht 1.0’ 1.7’
12:54 p.m. 6.6’ 11:56 p.m. 5.0’
5:20 a.m. 1.4’ 7.15 p.m. 3.8’
1:31 p.m. 6.6’
6:19 a.m. 1.7’ 7:48 p.m. 3.2’
1:09 a.m. 5.2’ 2:00 p.m. 6.6’
7:09 a.m. 8:14 p.m.
2.1’ 2.7’
12:03 a.m. 6.1’ 2:31 p.m. 8.2’
6:33 a.m. 1.5’ 8.28 p.m. 4.2’
1:33 a.m. 6.2’ 3:08 p.m. 8.2’
7:32 a.m. 1.9’ 9:01 p.m. 3.6’
2:46 a.m. 6.4’ 3:27 p.m. 8.1’
8:22 a.m. 9:27 p.m.
2.3’ 3.0’
1:37 p.m. 7.4’
5:55 a.m. 1.4’ 7:50 p.m. 3.8’
12:39 a.m. 5.6’ 2:14 p.m. 7.4’
6:54 a.m. 1.7’ 8:23 p.m. 3.2’
1:52 a.m. 5.8’ 2:43 p.m. 7.3’
7:44 a.m. 8:49 p.m.
2.1’ 2.7’
Dungeness Bay*
Warm Stationary
Pressure Low
High
Oct 20 Oct 27
Nation/World
Victoria 59° | 51°
Ocean: SE wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. W swell 3 ft at 10 seconds. Morning rain. SE wind 10 to 20 kt becoming 5 to 15 kt after midnight. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. SW swell 3 ft at 9 seconds.
LaPush
Nov 3
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s
80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
Burlington, Vt. Casper Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Charlotte, N.C. Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Concord, N.H. Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Evansville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Great Falls Greensboro, N.C. Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu mmHouston Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock
64 72 68 77 71 72 60 79 70 64 78 62 82 80 71 68 72 61 74 83 46 62 55 61 62 66 65 64 86 86 75 85 76 55 64 85 66 80
47 48 61 50 51 44 55 56 49 59 52 38 58 52 46 56 56 51 59 62 28 45 45 57 32 50 40 36 76 65 56 59 63 30 57 78 58 64
.01 .03 .05
.26
.69
.82
Clr Cldy Cldy PCldy Clr Rain Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Clr Clr Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr
PCldy Cldy PCldy MM Cldy Cldy .01 Cldy Cldy .61 Cldy Cldy
Texas Ä 25 in West Yellowstone, Mont.
Washington D.C. 77° | 57°
Los Angeles 80° | 63°
Full
à 93 in Laredo,
New York 75° | 59°
Detroit 71° | 54°
Miami 86° | 72°
Washington TODAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: Light wind becoming E to 10 kt in the afternoon. Wind waves 1 ft or less. Rain likely in the morning then rain in the afternoon. E wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 ft or less.
Tides
SATURDAY
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News
THURSDAY
Pt. Cloudy
Seattle 61° | 55°
Cold
TONIGHT
The Lower 48
National forecast Nation TODAY
Almanac
Brinnon 59/52
Aberdeen 65/55
Yesterday
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Los Angeles Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan, P.R. Santa Fe St Ste Marie Shreveport
76 83 65 83 87 77 61 62 85 79 67 67 69 63 63 88 76 69 89 72 61 85 62 60 60 73 66 81 72 80 73 86 71 74 95 69 57 82
62 61 49 64 73 53 55 54 61 70 52 62 53 51 56 66 42 51 68 50 40 54 43 51 44 49 46 60 61 72 60 64 64 60 80 47 49 62
.36
Clr PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Clr PCldy Rain Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Clr Clr Clr Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Clr PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy
.19 .01
MM .08
.12
.06 .27 .07
GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots; ft or ’ feet
Sioux Falls Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington, D.C. Wichita Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del.
61 67 81 62 85 63 69 62 68 68
57 53 68 57 67 55 50 57 46 46
Cldy Cldy PCldy Clr .01 Rain Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy PCldy
_______ Auckland Beijing Berlin Brussels Cairo Calgary Guadalajara Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg Kabul London Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome San Jose, CRica Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver
Hi Lo Otlk 60 50 Clr/PM Sh 66 47 Clr 64 49 Breezy/Rain 59 50 PCldy/Sh 88 68 PCldy 60 38 PCldy 82 60 PM Ts 86 79 AM Sh 71 57 Cldy/Sh 90 60 PM Sh 80 49 Clr 58 44 PCldy 79 50 PCldy 64 37 PCldy 42 31 PM Sh 96 74 Clr 60 43 PCldy 81 68 Clr 76 54 PCldy 78 64 PM Sh/Ts 67 61 Cldy/Sh 75 55 Clr 65 44 PCldy/Sh 62 56 Cldy/Sh
Briefly . . .
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PORT LUDLOW — A presentation, “Seeing the Nisei Soldier Through French Eyes: The 442nd/100th in the
Vosnes,”will take place at 121 Marina View Drive from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday. All are welcome to attend and talk with Herve and Sylvie Claudon, who grew up in the Vosnes Mountains in France and heard stories of the courage of the townspeople in Bruyeres during World War II. This presentation offers a different perspective of the 442nd/100th Battalion as seen through French eyes. For more information, contact Barbara Berthiuame at barara.berthiame @gmail.com or 360-4370423. Peninsula Daily News
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of Norway, family and natural surroundings, according to a news release. Born in 1925 in the Arctic town of Kirkenes, Norway, Solveig reflects on life during the throes of World War II, her indigenous
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CHIMACUM — Daughters of Norway Thea Foss No. 45 will meet at the Tri-
Area Community Center, 10 West Valley Road, at 1 p.m. Sunday. The group will present “Solveig: The Life and Artwork of Solveig Arneng Johnson,” whose body of artwork captures her love
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Daughters of Norway meet
5A1423120